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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   606,347 views  5,683 comments

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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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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  

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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

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4509   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Mar 3, 6:37pm  

AD says

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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

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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%.

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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
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4517   AD   2024 Mar 3, 9:37pm  

Eman says

https://x.com/kobeissiletter/status/1764317091950162215?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q


If rents are rising only by 2% annually, then that is management or sustainable as income is growing at least by that rate. I realize it could be higher than 2% since housing is only about 37% of the total household expenses.
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4518   Misc   2024 Mar 3, 9:39pm  

That chart is kinda flat. Looks like we are only 3% away from the record home ownership.
4519   AD   2024 Mar 3, 9:51pm  

Misc says

That chart is kinda flat. Looks like we are only 3% away from the record home ownership.


Notice home ownership is shrinking and is almost at the same level as 1980.

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4520   Misc   2024 Mar 3, 10:20pm  

Look at it by Race. That's where it is really telling. Blacks kinda fucked up there in a big sortta way. Not all their own fault either.
4521   WookieMan   2024 Mar 4, 12:14am  

Misc says

Look at it by Race. That's where it is really telling. Blacks kinda fucked up there in a big sortta way. Not all their own fault either.

It is 100%. My nephew is thriving. Straight A's in middle school. Tons of friends. It's family structure. Single mom's cannot raise kids. Does it happen, sure. Likelihood of the kid being good is trash. It's not happening. It's culture and family structure.

Baby daddy is in and out of prison. I don't think my nephew has even seen him in 4-5 years. His dad for fucks sake. He beats his mom, my SIL when he's out. I have a successful family, but I don't think people realize the reality of blacks. She's dated 3 and dumped the good one that actually got a college degree.

Maybe I'm off, but music has a lot to do with it. White rock and music like country (which I hate) are more about emotion and positivity. Black modern music is about harm and treating people like shit. Been that way since the 80's. I loved Public Enemy as a kid, but it's just fucking negative as can be. It shouldn't be about bitching. I didn't do a damn thing wrong to a black person. Quit whining and grow up.
4522   Misc   2024 Mar 4, 12:40am  

During the Housing Bubble Days of free money, Blacks got their free money by refinancing their homes into Sub-prime mortgages. They got more money than they had ever seen before in one place in their entire lives. They blew it on everything imaginable. Word spread throughout the Black community of the riches that could be had. A vast percentage of Black homeowners helped themselves to the bounty egged on by George W. and his rhetoric of the ownership society.
When their mortgages reset to the higher interest rates they defaulted en-mass because they were told their properties were worth less than the mortgages. Foreclosures abounded. This caused extra wear and tear on the already weak family structure. Not many marriages survived.

Whites got their free money by taking out HELOCs on their properties. They got even more free money than the typical Black family and blew it on everything imaginable. Swimming pools were popular as one of the many splurges. When they ran out of free HELOC money and interest rates increased. They stopped paying on their HELOCS. Their properties nosedived in value. Since their properties decreased in value, they went to bankruptcy court and had their HELOCS discharged because they were no longer secured by the property. They got the swimming pool and all the good times of HELOC money. Since they were able to keep their house, it caused less wear and tear on the marriage.

Note that there were large variations from this norm and a few Blacks worked the HELOC scam and a few Whites got caught up getting sub-prime mortgages, but this was typical for the Phoenix metro area.
4523   WookieMan   2024 Mar 4, 1:03am  

Misc says

When their mortgages reset to the higher interest rates they defaulted en-mass because they were told their properties were worth less than the mortgages. Foreclosures abounded. This caused extra wear and tear on the already weak family structure. Not many marriages survived.

Eh. Every marriage goes through financial struggle. EVERY single one. That's not an excuse. Marriages survive on commitment. I've fucked up before. Have to own it.

Black men dump sperm and run. It is just facts and stats. It's not racist, it's what is actually happening. I have the fortune of raising a black kid that's not mine because I married a woman and committed to family. It's not the kids fault his mom binge drinks and cannot drive a car. Compounded with weed. SIL, but she's hot too. She fucked up her life. Her child is better off with me of all people.

Family and structure is crucial. It can be slightly off, but you need adults. If I'm being honest and I don't think I've said this here, but I'm a functioning alcoholic. No traffic violations. I drink steady, not binge. Won golfing today while drinking, well yesterday. 3 kids in sports. 3 age ranges. Never late..Never miss anything. Black parents, usually single mom don't do that.

Basically an alcoholic is better than a black person raising kids. Soak that in.... They need to stop worrying about their skin color and doing work. Not much else to it. And stop being criminals for some dumbs reason and blaming others that's what they had to do.
4524   Misc   2024 Mar 4, 1:17am  

It's tough to go from blowing money like there's no tomorrow to losing everything you've worked for including the house and being forced to move. I forget what the unemployment rates were for Blacks....but yep that too.

Don't get me wrong. There is plenty wrong with Black society...like everything you've mentioned.
4525   HeadSet   2024 Mar 4, 11:22am  

Eman says

Also, be careful taking real estate advice from renters.

Really? All those who said "I should have bought?"
4526   AD   2024 Mar 4, 11:25am  

WookieMan says

Misc says

Look at it by Race. That's where it is really telling. Blacks kinda fucked up there in a big sortta way. Not all their own fault either.

It is 100%. My nephew is thriving. Straight A's in middle school. Tons of friends. It's family structure. Single mom's cannot raise kids. Does it happen, sure. Likelihood of the kid being good is trash. It's not happening. It's culture and family structure.


Need a stable environment to supplement the broken family. If it is a single mom who is stable and tries, then provide the resources such as a good public charter school and also non profits in their neighborhood like Boys and Girls Club, etc.

A stable and nurturing environment can overcome genetics and bad family history.

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4527   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 4, 12:48pm  

Eman says

Housing bubble, or inflation, or……?

The only people buying are those with cash.
4528   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 4, 12:50pm  

Wow, it's my registration anniversary!

I started as a secular liberal and got @Patrick 'ed into becoming a MAGA Extremist
4529   AD   2024 Mar 4, 12:52pm  

AmericanKulak says


Eman says

Housing bubble, or inflation, or……?

The only people buying are those with cash.


A neighbor is selling his 3 bedrm/2.5 bath/2 car garage/1550 sq ft/built in 2013 townhome for around $310,000 contract price, as he listed it for $330,000 which was peak price in early 2022. He bought it around $290,000 in 2021.

He has a VA mortgage for 30 years at 2.5%. He said the investor buyer is going to assume the mortgage and has submitted their paperwork to the bank or mortgage note holder.

I wonder what percentage of sales now are with assumable mortgages like VA or FHA.

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4530   stereotomy   2024 Mar 4, 12:59pm  

AmericanKulak says

Wow, it's my registration anniversary!

I started as a secular liberal and got Patrick 'ed into becoming a MAGA Extremist

Welcome to the tribe.
4531   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 4, 1:55pm  

Fannie Mae's secret Condo Building blacklist!



Some say Fannie Mae’s confidential list of blacklisted condos grew after the Surfside collapse in 2021. Fannie plans to release around 3Q 2024.

MIAMI – Some people trying to buy a condominium in South Florida but getting mysteriously rejected for a mortgage could be in for a jolt: The reason they can’t get a loan may be that the condo is on a secret quasi-governmental blacklist.

News media reports and data leaks to a pair of law firms in New England and Fort Lauderdale have now confirmed what some in the condo industry suspected: that Fannie Mae, one of two federally chartered companies that help determine who qualifies for home mortgages, has for at least two years maintained a confidential database of condo buildings, including hundreds in Florida, that it won’t back for loans, typically because of maintenance or financial issues.

https://www.floridarealtors.org/news-media/news-articles/2023/12/fannie-mae-maintains-secret-list-restricted-condos

Other fun news: The new Florida Condo law now prohibits elderly cheapskates from putting off structural repairs, which is one of the reasons for the skyrocking Condo (and HOA, since HOA buildings like Clubhouses are included) fees. Previously, Condo Assocs didn't need to do inspections starting at certain years (25-30 from construction) and could delay assessments/reserve building for known issues - again, from the Surfside collapse situation.

As an elderly Renaissance Pope once said, upon being told the Antichrist was born: "I shall leave that for my successor to deal with"
4532   HeadSet   2024 Mar 4, 1:55pm  

AmericanKulak says

Wow, it's my registration anniversary!

I started as a secular liberal and got Patrick 'ed into becoming a MAGA Extremist

Patrick himself used to be an Obama supporting lefty.
4533   Eman   2024 Mar 4, 2:09pm  

HeadSet says

Eman says


Also, be careful taking real estate advice from renters.

Really? All those who said "I should have bought?"

Well, I’ve been on this site just shy of 1.5 decades. This site started during the previous housing bubble. Those, who should have bought but didn’t, that’s 1.5 decades of loss opportunity. Hope they use the “saved money” and invest wisely.

At this point, it seems like it’s a 2.0 housing bubble, but who knows. Unless it’s an extremely compelling deal, I’m happy sitting on my hands and doing nothing.
4534   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 4, 2:10pm  

The recent Bubble blew up faster than the 2000s Bubble.

There's too much money chasing too few opportunities because modern growth is predictated on easy money and flattened wages.

Because savings and dividends are depreciated, and cheap money and stock growth celebrated, we're in the situation we're in.
4535   Eman   2024 Mar 4, 2:12pm  

AmericanKulak says

Eman says


Housing bubble, or inflation, or……?

The only people buying are those with cash.

Not in my experience. The buyers for my last 3 flips were all financed in the 6-7%…ish mortgage rates. It was simply crazy looking at their monthly mortgage payments.
4536   Eman   2024 Mar 4, 2:14pm  

AmericanKulak says

The recent Bubble blew up faster than the 2000s Bubble.

There's too much money chasing too few opportunities because modern growth is predictated on easy money and flattened wages.

Because savings and dividends are depreciated, and cheap money and stock growth celebrated, we're in the situation we're in.

I sense something really bad is going to happen. Just don’t know when or how, and which market is going to crack first.
4537   AmericanKulak   2024 Mar 4, 2:32pm  

Eman says


I sense something really bad is going to happen. Just don’t know when or how, and which market is going to crack first.

There's no way it isn't.

For all the fantasies of endless waves of Chinese and South American and Russian cartel operators buying hundreds of thousands of suburban SFHs and middling townhomes, at the bottom is housing affordability, which has nearly doubled since COVID while wages clearly did not.

Miami Condos, LA pied-a-tierres, sure. But the Villages? The Suburbs of Boise and Pigeon Forge and Asheville full of Russian mafiosos, Venezuelan Cartel Members, and CCP businessmen? No.

Whatever causes the downward wave, I'm standing by my massive demographic shift theory.
4538   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Mar 4, 4:56pm  

AD says


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%.


The 10 year Treasury rate is what the fucking bond market fucking sez it is, nothing more.

That 'rule' you cite is just a coincidence in a world were Boomers were in their mass peak earning and saving years instead of mass retirement drawdown years. And the government is increasing the federal debt by $1 trillion every 100 DAYS now.

Plus, the Inflation rate from the government is bullshiit.
4539   AD   2024 Mar 4, 5:19pm  

Eman says

Well, I’ve been on this site just shy of 1.5 decades. This site started during the previous housing bubble. Those, who should have bought but didn’t, that’s 1.5 decades of loss opportunity. Hope they use the “saved money” and invest wisely.

At this point, it seems like it’s a 2.0 housing bubble, but who knows. Unless it’s an extremely compelling deal, I’m happy sitting on my hands and doing nothing.


I've been on this site since watching a video of Patrick on 20/20 about the housing bubble and learning of his book titled Housing Trap. It was around 2010 but I think Patrick was on 20/20 in 2007.

It has to do with housing affordability ultimately, whereas housing standards are maintained (no more than 1 family under 1 roof) and median housing costs are no more than 38% of household income.

And it still applies to San Fran Bay Area that's very nuanced since the median salary there is skewed toward the tech industry.

.
4540   AD   2024 Mar 4, 5:21pm  

Eman says

AmericanKulak says

The recent Bubble blew up faster than the 2000s Bubble.

There's too much money chasing too few opportunities because modern growth is predictated on easy money and flattened wages.

Because savings and dividends are depreciated, and cheap money and stock growth celebrated, we're in the situation we're in.

I sense something really bad is going to happen. Just don’t know when or how, and which market is going to crack first.


Not going to happen until after the election. Mainstream media will lie or black out stories in order to protect Biden.

What sucks for Biden is there is a lot of time (about 6 months at least) for shit to get real bad no matter how much the mainstream media spins it such as blames Republicans or Putin, or just blacks it out (i.e., ignores it).

.
4541   zzyzzx   2024 Mar 5, 7:40am  

I just bought a house and now jobless
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/1b6rely/i_just_bought_a_house_and_now_jobless/

Further discussion here (with deleted info from the embarrassed OP in the original post included:
https://old.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/1b750nw/when_stretching_too_far_to_own_a_home_goes_bad/

To summarize and some of this doesn't make a whole lot of sense, but 50 year old guy buys a house 500k and some change, $4700 payment. Isn't a tech worker but works in tech ie marketing, on a 150k a year contract. Buys house, gets laid off, not eligible for unemployment as he's a contract worker, tech jobs are hard to come by and many of these overinflated salaries are a thing of the past. Apparently rents are low compared to home prices so renting out the home won't come close to covering the mortgage, apparently house is a 2/1 fixer upper. Even if he gets a roomate he's looking at getting $1500 tops, probably $1100 more likely. Trying to figure out what to do.

So let's look at the situation, stretches way too far to own this house but says its because he's in a HCOL area. Has only like a 2 month emergency fund, no 401k and a small IRA. Initially said selling would walk away with 15k, then break even, then acknowledged would probably have to pay money to walk away. When people tell him he can't afford the house find a way to get out of it he keeps talking about how he can afford it later this year when rates come down, sounds like even if everything went perfect he would have needed rates come down to afford this and that's if no repairs come up, no job loss, no property tax or insurance hike and I'd imagine so long as other living expenses i.e. - food, car insurance, etc .don't go up either. He's really stuck on the idea everyone is wrong he can afford the house, once rates come down, sounds like a realtor got that into his head.
4542   zzyzzx   2024 Mar 5, 7:49am  

https://www.reddit.com/r/debtfree/comments/1b6tmw6/80k_in_debt_and_drowning/

80k in Debt and drowning

My husband and I are in 80K of credit card debt. I am just not sure what to do at this point. The worst part is, we bought a house two years ago with no credit card debt and only a car payment.
4543   Eman   2024 Mar 5, 8:19am  

zzyzzx says

https://www.reddit.com/r/debtfree/comments/1b6tmw6/80k_in_debt_and_drowning/

80k in Debt and drowning

My husband and I are in 80K of credit card debt. I am just not sure what to do at this point. The worst part is, we bought a house two years ago with no credit card debt and only a car payment.

CC debt is scary… 10-30% interest. I guess people did it out of desperation and hoped they could catch up, but the debt and interest spiraled out of control. So unfortunate.
4544   GNL   2024 Mar 5, 8:25am  

zzyzzx says


https://www.reddit.com/r/debtfree/comments/1b6tmw6/80k_in_debt_and_drowning/

80k in Debt and drowning

My husband and I are in 80K of credit card debt. I am just not sure what to do at this point. The worst part is, we bought a house two years ago with no credit card debt and only a car payment.

Since you already have the loan for the house, stop paying the CC. If possible, make a year's worth of car payments on the CC and THEN stop paying the CC.

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