16
4

housing prices peak 2


 invite response                
2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   516,394 views  4,920 comments

by AD   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

.

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.

« First        Comments 4,477 - 4,516 of 4,920       Last »     Search these comments

4477   AD   2024 Feb 27, 10:38pm  

AD says

I'm focused mostly on Central and South Florida, but I think the whole state will shake out on a trip back to the historical mean.

According to rent.com:

Rents in Florida have decreased -4.15% year over year.


3 bedrm townhome rents went up 7% over last 12 months for Panama City Beach: https://www.zillow.com/rental-manager/market-trends/32407/?propertyTypes=townhouse&bedrooms=3

My guess is because the 3 bedrm townhomes come with a very valuable garage and people don't want to rent a 3 bedroom apartment on the 2nd floor.

.
4478   AD   2024 Feb 27, 10:48pm  

AmericanKulak says

The decline of family formation - we are a post-nuclear family, not just post-extended family society - and the record unaffordability, and the building of 4/5 beds on Zero Lots is going to break the long term trend. Not many lazy girl jobs can support a $350k SFH mortgage when there's only a cat or single child, when factoring in 6 figure college debt on top of it all.


I see your point as far as "demographics is destiny" (to quote Professor Larry Sabato)

You are saying there won't be enough demand for McMansion's (+4 bedroom, +3200 square feet, 3 car garage, etc.) such as in Eman's zip code as well as in mountain towns of Colorado and Idaho, etc

I guess then that is why we are not seeing a large increase in new home starts as even with immigration, the home builders are accounting for this ?

.



.
4479   WookieMan   2024 Feb 28, 7:25am  

AmericanKulak says

Then we're going to have the Boomer expiration/mandatory downsize (meaning, it will not longer be an option to delay leaving the larger home due to health or death) starting in the next 5-10 years.

Boomers are keeping their homes. Likely paid off. Kids living in them. I'm working on a deal to get my mom $200k or so for 65 acres on a river. They're staying put and she'll buy my house or give me money for the build. Best Man in my wedding parents pay $30k/yr in property taxes. No kids in the school. The one's with wealth ain't leaving. They don't care. If you have $2M+ in the bank/investments, You can sit on your ass with everything paid especially in this high interest environment.

I don't see the market changing for kind of a long time. I don't like predictions, but I think we're going to see the lowest SLOWEST housing boom. I'm talking 2 decades. This is slight upward/sideways movement for a long time. There's no crash coming. It just won't be gang busters with a few regions that might eat shit, but 20-30% losses ain't coming.

I don't think people realize what the housing bust was. It was financing and overbuilding. That's not happening and probably won't in most our lifetimes outside of some hipster areas.
4480   zzyzzx   2024 Feb 28, 8:48am  

AD says

My guess is because the 3 bedrm townhomes come with a very valuable garage and people don't want to rent a 3 bedroom apartment on the 2nd floor.


You would think that being on at least the 2nd floor in a place like Panama City beach would be the more desirable location.
4481   zzyzzx   2024 Feb 28, 8:51am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-home-buying-demand-nears-120000320.html

US Home-Buying Demand Nears Worst Since 1995 With Rates Above 7%
4482   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Feb 28, 9:48am  

zzyzzx says


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-home-buying-demand-nears-120000320.html

US Home-Buying Demand Nears Worst Since 1995 With Rates Above 7%


But...BUT RE 'experts' On PatNet Who Don't Know Shit About The Fed Nor Demographics TOLD US the 7% mortgage rate was DOA in 2024!

Reality: Not only is it still here, but...despite the occasional dips below the 7% threshold...is going to stay or even rise, over time.

That means housing prices are going to have to fall, in general. All markets are local so there will be some big variations.

Fall...or don't get sold. Homebuilders have already figured this out and now outcompete with existing home sellers with mortgage points buy downs. They have to move their houses, after all.
4483   AD   2024 Feb 28, 1:08pm  

zzyzzx says

AD says

My guess is because the 3 bedrm townhomes come with a very valuable garage and people don't want to rent a 3 bedroom apartment on the 2nd floor.

You would think that being on at least the 2nd floor in a place like Panama City beach would be the more desirable location.


Bedrooms are on the 2nd floor of townhomes in Panama City Beach. Are you implying because of flooding ? Or even worse such as a tsunami ?

.
4484   GNL   2024 Feb 28, 1:10pm  

In my opinion, we only get a crash if people can't pay their mortgages. If RE transactions stay low enough, that could happen.
4485   AD   2024 Feb 28, 1:11pm  

UkraineIsFucked says

That means housing prices are going to have to fall, in general. All markets are local so there will be some big variations.

Fall...or don't get sold. Homebuilders have already figured this out and now outcompete with existing home sellers with mortgage points buy downs. They have to move their houses, after all.


But adjustments are being made as the new home construction rate is still well below 2005 levels.

The home building industry is seeing the same demographic data as you, so I don't think they will overbuild and there will be an oversupply condition to cause a major drop in prices in the long term.

If anything home prices may return to the mean such as fall back to the trend line of 4.25% annual increase in home value.

I see the air slowly being let out of any housing bubble, as there are not as many subprime mortgages as in 2004-2007.

.
4486   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Feb 28, 2:01pm  

AD says

The home building industry is seeing the same demographic data as you, so I don't think they will overbuild and there will be an oversupply condition to cause a major drop in prices in the long term.


Did I say they were going to overbuild? No, I did not.

And you don't know what I was referring to by demographics. Had nothing to do with demand for housing. Had to do with cost of money. Since I was talking about mortgage rates I figured that was pretty clear.
4487   AD   2024 Feb 28, 2:28pm  

UkraineIsFucked says


AD says

The home building industry is seeing the same demographic data as you, so I don't think they will overbuild and there will be an oversupply condition to cause a major drop in prices in the long term.

Did I say they were going to overbuild? No, I did not.

And you don't know what I was referring to by demographics. Had nothing to do with demand for housing. Had to do with cost of money. Since I was talking about mortgage rates I figured that was pretty clear.


I never said you said they were going to overbuild. I stated they would adjust the new construction rate to match forecasted demand. Yes the cost of money impacts demand. The higher the future cost, then prices may drop even more if there is an over supply. That is why home builders are cautious.

Also combine this with housing prices essentially remaining flat from 2022 to 2025 so that income catches up with housing costs.

And also demographic trends may cause a drop in demand for +4 bedroom homes as AmericanKulak pointed out. That is another factor that is making home builders cautious.

.
4488   AD   2024 Feb 28, 2:34pm  

UkraineIsFucked says

Had to do with cost of money. Since I was talking about mortgage rates I figured that was pretty clear.


The 30 year mortgage rate is eventually going to steady around 5.5% this year, which puts it about 2% above the locked-in mortgage rate when housing prices peaked (circa February 2022).

Even motivated home sellers in 2024 and 2025 may offer to buy down 4 discount points to lower that rate from 5.5% to 4.5%. It only costs 4% of the mortgage to buy the 4 points, but is nearly comparable to a 10% drop in home price.

Sale prices in my townhome HOA have fallen about 15% from Februrary 2022 peak. So a rate of 4.5% is a great deal for a mortgagee especially since the median local household income has increased +5% annually since early 2022.

.
4489   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 28, 2:42pm  

WookieMan says


Boomers are keeping their homes. Likely paid off. Kids living in them.

Until they MUST pay for assisted living that day, no delaying for market recovery. And many boomers haven't entirely paid off their homes.

And if the kids inherit, you're assuming the kids can move from Indiana to Arizona and ditch their jobs or businesses and their own kid's schools in a heartbeat to live in them.

And if they do so, that only means yet another house will go on the market in Indiana instead of Arizona. It will still be rented out or sold, and it will mostly happen in a decade time frame
4490   WookieMan   2024 Feb 28, 2:44pm  

AD says

I never said you said they were going to overbuild. I stated they would adjust the new construction rate to match forecasted demand. Yes the cost of money impacts demand. The higher the future cost, then prices may drop even more if there is an over supply. That is why home builders are cautious.

This is basic math guys and understand the past. There are no builders. There are no skilled trades for new construction. All this happened because of the housing crash. Throw covid on top of it. We're 10 years from have any substantial building at all nationally. Millennials will eventually get their shit in order OR they'll take mom and dads house. The latter is the most likely.

So no one learns the skills to build anything. No new houses are built. This is obvious as can be. Sales will stay low (which don't matter) because of interest rates. Prices will be on a slow upslope for another decade until building ramps up. Honestly unless any of us live to 100, I don't see how there could be a housing crash. It would be an economic collapse for whatever reason.

The 2000 tech crash was minor to the housing crash. These thing don't go boom that often. If you're gonna live somewhere for 5-10 years minimum I'd buy even at today's interest rates. Not saying it's a buyers market, but you won't lose.
4492   GNL   2024 Feb 28, 3:50pm  

AmericanKulak says





That graph looks sucky.
4493   AD   2024 Feb 28, 3:57pm  

WookieMan says

The 2000 tech crash was minor to the housing crash.


Yes as the 2000 tech crash led to the dissolution of tech firms that were vampires as far as equity blood.

So the stronger companies survived, as even Jeff Bezos said that Amazon would make it through the crash because it was wisely investing for the future.

Yes, the housing crash definitely had a bigger disastrous footprint.

Yes, I was just reading PCB Life (myPCBlife.com) about in-home assisted living by "Panhandle Assisted Care". The future trend is this as far as innovative ways to care for senior citizens in their homes.

Our local school district which includes Haney Tech is promoting blue collar trade certifications. They are offering scholarships such as for training to be carpenters, conditioning techs, electricians, etc.

Also Florida is working to ensure the state is not flooded with undocumented workers in the construction trade.

.
4494   AD   2024 Feb 28, 3:59pm  

AmericanKulak says






yeah, as the home construction industry is tapping the brakes as far as what they see ahead in the future such as with respect to demographics and also interest rates.

I think the new norm is not low interest rates or Zero Interest Rate Policy like from 2008 to 201, so the 30 yr mortgage rate will likely be around 5.75% instead of being below 4% for at least 12 months.
4495   GNL   2024 Feb 28, 5:51pm  

You're predicting sub 4% rates in 12 months?
4496   AD   2024 Feb 28, 6:27pm  

GNL says

You're predicting sub 4% rates in 12 months?


No. I am predicting the 30 year mortgage rate steadying around 5.5% within the next 12 months.

.
4497   GNL   2024 Feb 28, 9:06pm  

VA which has been providing no money down mortgages and 100% cash out refis calls for halt to foreclosures:

https://news.va.gov/press-room/va-calls-on-mortgage-servicers-to-pause-foreclosures-of-va-guaranteed-loans-through-may-31-2024/

FHA suspends foreclosures for 60 days: https://www.housingfinance.com/news/hud-halts-foreclosures-for-60-days_o

The entire US monetary and financial system depends on overpriced real estate and that system is going fight like a meth-crazed army of drooling red-eyed Orcs to defend its goblin infested empire,
4498   AD   2024 Feb 28, 9:29pm  

GNL says

VA which has been providing no money down mortgages and 100% cash out refis calls for halt to foreclosures:

https://news.va.gov/press-room/va-calls-on-mortgage-servicers-to-pause-foreclosures-of-va-guaranteed-loans-through-may-31-2024/

FHA suspends foreclosures for 60 days: https://www.housingfinance.com/news/hud-halts-foreclosures-for-60-days_o


Election year scheme ? I am expecting more announcements like in addition to the regular proclamations of student loan debt forgiveness.

.
4499   GNL   2024 Feb 29, 6:41am  

Seems plausible. This country is so fucked politically.
4500   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Feb 29, 7:26am  

GNL says

The entire US monetary and financial system depends on overpriced real estate and that system is going fight like a meth-crazed army of drooling red-eyed Orcs to defend its goblin infested empire,


How could this be! We were told by the RE 'experts' on PatNet...
4502   AD   2024 Feb 29, 1:40pm  

UkraineIsFucked says

https://wolfstreet.com/2024/02/29/worst-monthly-spike-of-core-services-pce-inflation-in-22-years-and-not-just-housing-powells-gonna-have-another-cow/


Yeah The Wolfman at Wolf Street website has been warning about core inflation (or inflation excluding food and energy) such as the costs for home repair (i.e., air condition repair, etc.), housing costs, etc.

Still core inflation was up 0.4% from December 2023 to January 2024 and up 2.8% for the last 12 months.

As The Wolfman says, lets see how this plays out such as with the 6 month moving average for core inflation and overall inflation.

That is if we can trust the economic numbers reported by the Biden Admin are not being massaged more than usual during an election year.

Just seems like the circumstance is too ideal for the Biden Admin to show inflation going down while unemployment remaining low. And I say this in the same context of not being shocked by any "October surprise".

.
4503   Misc   2024 Mar 3, 1:15pm  

There are no maximum number of people allowed in a SFH via Supreme Court.

https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2021R1/Downloads/PublicTestimonyDocument/4278

There is no maximum number of owners. There are no maximum number of parties on mortgages.

A bill has been introduced to allow illegals in California access to the California Dream for All Shared Appreciation Loans program, which launched spring of 2023 to give qualifying first-time home buyers a loan that covers up to 20% of a property’s purchase price that will not accumulate interest or have required monthly payments. Loanees are instead expected to pay back the original loan amount in addition to 20% of the increase in the home’s value when the property’s mortgage is refinanced or resold.

https://www.foxnews.com/media/new-california-bill-make-illegal-immigrants-eligible-first-time-homebuyer-loans

So, no down payment needed 'cause the 20% is covered by the State of California. You just cram enough illegals into the dwelling so their combined wages/social benefits conform to Fannie/Freddie guidelines and voila the American dream.

We may get some new highs on house prices.
4504   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Mar 3, 2:25pm  

Misc says

So, no down payment needed 'cause the 20% is covered by the State of California. You just cram enough illegals into the dwelling so their combined wages/social benefits conform to Fannie/Freddie guidelines and voila the American dream.

We may get some new highs on house prices.


Think.about it.

This is quite brilliant when looking at the perspective of what it is really designed to accomplish.
4505   B.A.C.A.H.   2024 Mar 3, 3:57pm  

Misc says


You just cram enough illegals into the dwelling so their combined wages/social benefits conform to Fannie/Freddie guidelines cover the rent for our favorite landlord.

More landless peasants to exploit.
4506   Eman   2024 Mar 3, 4:09pm  

“The bill does not prevent landlords and other private entities from setting occupancy limits for their own units, within existing law (ORS 90.262). The -1 amendment clarifies that the bill will not change cities’ ability to limit the number of people per square foot or enforce fire and building codes.” - THE END
4507   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 3, 5:11pm  

FLORIDA RENTS COLLAPSE


Renting in Florida is expensive. But if it's not exactly getting better, it is getting less worse.

Florida saw the highest percentage of decline in rent prices of any state year over year in 2023, according to the January report from Rent.com. There was a 9.21% drop in the median average rent price, which is currently $2,095 a month, down 1.14% from December.

Don't get too excited, the current national median rent price is $1,964. But that's down as well, from its peak in August 2022 at $2,054, according to the report. And that doesn't mean that your specific rent, whatever is, has gone down.

https://www.jacksonville.com/story/news/2024/02/16/florida-rent-prices-cost-national-average/72610845007/

$1900/month was a 3 bed condo ON THE WATER in a Sunny Isles Beach high rise with a wrap around balcony in the mid 2010s. I know because I shopped for one and put a relative in one then. Granted, it was faux marble and mirrors with gold trim except what was shaggy White but old folks like their Liberace styles. Not a shitty Orlando or Ocala or PSL landlocked surburban ranch with the 45 degree kitchen off to the side of the Great Room...

Standby for Inventory and Pending data...
4508   AD   2024 Mar 3, 6:33pm  

.

Hotshot Wharton professor sees $34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%: ‘It could derail the next administration’

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/ar-BB1jfnRI

.
4509   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Mar 3, 6:37pm  

AD says

.

Hotshot Wharton professor sees $34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%: ‘It could derail the next administration’

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/ar-BB1jfnRI

.


BUT...BUT Real Estate Experts on PatNet said rates will go down this year! And in 2022 and early 2023 they said no way would they even rise to what they are now!

Monetary geniuses all!
4510   AD   2024 Mar 3, 7:09pm  

UkraineIsFucked says

AD says

.

Hotshot Wharton professor sees $34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%: ‘It could derail the next administration’

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/ar-BB1jfnRI

.

BUT...BUT Real Estate Experts on PatNet said rates will go down this year! And in 2022 and early 2023 they said no way would they even rise to what they are now!

Monetary geniuses all!


I still think that the 30 year mortgage rate will steady around 5.5% in 2024, as inflation continues to subside. The 30 yr mortgage rate typically is 1.5% greater than the 10 Year Treasury and the 10 Year Treasury is 1.5% greater than annual inflation.

Notice annual inflation which is accepted as PCE is steadying around 2.5%. It just has to average 2.5% or less for at least 6 consecutive months to get the mortgage industry to adjust and lower the mortgage rate to 5.5%.

.
4511   Eman   2024 Mar 3, 7:13pm  

AD says


.

Hotshot Wharton professor sees $34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%: ‘It could derail the next administration’

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/ar-BB1jfnRI

.

Those who can’t do, teach…..I wouldn’t put much weight on what a professor said. Also, be careful taking real estate advice from renters.
4513   Misc   2024 Mar 3, 8:19pm  

And 32% of houses are purchased all cash. A lot of people have coin.

And home ownership rates are near record highs.
4514   Eman   2024 Mar 3, 8:46pm  

Holy 💩! This won’t end well, but what do I know? All I have been doing was twiddling my thumbs the last several months.



https://x.com/kobeissiletter/status/1764317091950162215?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q
4515   Misc   2024 Mar 3, 9:26pm  

Most kids in this country grow up poor and I mean really poor. Before Obama was president, there was a stigma associated with taking government aid. Obama removed that stigma. It can be argued either way whether this was for the better or not. Last stats I looked at pegged that 70% of children in this country were receiving some sort of governmental aid.

Try explaining to them that: no people do not need section-8 housing, they do not need to pay rent, they do not need a mortgage. That 32% of the houses purchased are done all cash. That, yes, the average price of a house is $417000. Regular people just have that much coin. The kids just cannot understand how that can be.
4516   AD   2024 Mar 3, 9:35pm  

Misc says

And home ownership rates are near record highs.


Not really
.



.

« First        Comments 4,477 - 4,516 of 4,920       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions