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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   675,932 views  6,637 comments

by AD   ➕follow (1)   ignore (1)  

.

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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5848   WookieMan   2025 Feb 1, 6:00am  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says

WookieMan says

I don't care about Blackrock

Because reality pisses all over your little world that you keep insisting should be real for the rest of us, that's why.

Why is this comment voted #2 Best Comment, Wookie?

B.A.C.A.H. says

WookieMan says

H1B's likely didn't own.

You claim to have Extreme Knowledge about a place you've never lived, and never worked in the trenches, nor experienced first hand the facts on the ground.

The Bay Area, which has a GDP and population bigger than most states, is chocked full of H1 homeowners. I've known many of them.

At what point did I claim knowledge of CA markets? I've said they're in for a rough ride. SFBA is different than San Diego area. It's like two different planets in the same state, been to both. I'd bet 60% or more SFBA residents haven't even been to San Diego. I've been to the 3 major metro multiple times.

Those H1B guys/gals are going to other states for work at some point. There's no need to be in CA unless you want to be. At some point tech will move to places like Texas, Phoenix, Nashville, South Carolina, etc. Housing and land cost for business is significantly cheaper in those areas. You can buy in TX and if work needs to be done you have a team of 10 people or whatever and fly them out to SFBA. That would cost less than 0.001% in overall revenue even if you had to do it weekly.

WFH changes the market as well. My buddy lives in Montana, bought a house there but is employed in IL. Same housing prices but cheaper property taxes. I get Elon and Vivek think you should work in an office, but some people do just fine with WFH. Covid changed things.

While the weather is great in CA as long as it's not on fire or you're slipping on shit and falling on a needle, people will move elsewhere. That was hyperbolic to an extent. H1B's are fine with that lifestyle, but given where they're coming from it's normal. Systems bend and eventually break. I live in a state that was exited the most in the last 2 decades I believe or at least top 3.

These fires in LA could literally drop GDP 5 percent statewide. Hollywood is dead. These won't be people making $150-200k/yr. They make millions a year at 13% top tax bracket and a lot are older and can move to a low cost of living area and rent a place for 3 months if they need to film a movie. CA will have to raise taxes on people that make less than the stars. Then those people start moving. And yes, I know you're taxed in the state you worked, but there are other studios now.

Don't believe, I don't give a shit, but I've lived it and have said coastal areas have problems coming. H1B's are a small percentage. You could know them all, that means nothing. A shift is coming for certain states. But hey, that guy that worked, studied and ran a real estate business knows nothing after 15 years working it.... (eye roll).

Who on this forum has worked in real estate? I know what GNL does, but that's not analysis (not a knock - I know you talk to a lot of brokers). You don't have to be on the ground in the location to analyze what is happening in 2025. There's enough data. Everyone gets one metric and doesn't compare it to another. Inventory vs mortgage applications. If people can't afford housing inventory would jump as people sell for different reasons. Building metrics. There's dozens of other metrics. People get sucked into median price and that's it.
5849   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 4, 10:16pm  

One thing is clear: Divest of Northern Virginia Real Estate NOW
5850   AD   2025 Feb 4, 10:26pm  

AmericanKulak says

One thing is clear: Divest of Northern Virginia Real Estate NOW


is that because of illegal immigration raids in shitholes like Manassas Park (Prince William County) and also Trump cuts to the federal bureaucracy (and contractors such as for USAID and US Dept of Education) ?

Did the People's Republic of Northern Virginia go thru some (even remotely) similar such as in the 1990s with the defense companies realignment ?

I remember Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral area went thru hardship as far as layoffs after the first Space Shuttle disaster

.
5851   AD   2025 Feb 4, 10:27pm  



5852   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 4, 10:58pm  

AD says


is that because of illegal immigration raids in shitholes like Manassas Park (Prince William County) and also Trump cuts to the federal bureaucracy (and contractors such as for USAID and US Dept of Education) ?

I was mostly jesting, but with USAID gone I'd definitely not buy any Commercial REITs up there.

Florida is on track to have it's usual 10-15 year boom-bust cycle as always, and as always, people will ignore current numbers. Florida has net out migration among 20-39 age group because of shit wages.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrN7cDJCTEQ

Yet people are still talking like it's 2022. Builders are still building; and thanks to post 2008 FL Laws (State, County, City), multifamily builders can't just flip the switch, they gotta finish what they started.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DT9hRF-nL5w

Florida is facing the ol' problem of "I want somebody cheap to serve me coffee and wipe my ass, but I don't want them living near me and I want my rental income to be very high" in a state with very little non-service industry (tourism, urinal bag changing).

No state income tax is great for a Minnesota retired teacher or NJ Fireman, but not as important for $18/hr young workers. The latter are better off with an income tax, but 20% higher wages with the same or lower housing costs. And many people tire of 90F/90%H in June-August; Young working people can't just stop working at their office, retail, medical job , hop in an RV, or guest bedroom surf relatives back north in Summer.
5853   zzyzzx   2025 Feb 5, 8:14am  

AmericanKulak says

And many people tire of 90F/90%H in June-August


It's like that around here, except not as much in June.
5854   zzyzzx   2025 Feb 5, 8:16am  

https://www.newsweek.com/florida-home-sells-130000-loss-housing-market-changes-2023830

Florida Home Sells At $130,000 Loss as Housing Market Changes

Blackstone, the property's owner, purchased the home for $490,000 in April 2022 and sold it on Wednesday for just $360,000—a sharp decline of $130,000, or roughly 27 percent.
5855   MolotovCocktail   2025 Feb 5, 8:31am  

zzyzzx says

https://www.newsweek.com/florida-home-sells-130000-loss-housing-market-changes-2023830

Florida Home Sells At $130,000 Loss as Housing Market Changes

Blackstone, the property's owner, purchased the home for $490,000 in April 2022 and sold it on Wednesday for just $360,000—a sharp decline of $130,000, or roughly 27 percent.


Yup.

DOGEWontAmountToShit says






https://x.com/nickgerli1/status/1884991201281036711
5856   zzyzzx   2025 Feb 5, 10:47am  

https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1ifmteo/my_home_has_been_on_the_market_for_100_days/

My home has been on the market for 100 days. Should I pull it and rent it at a loss?

The commentary is priceless!
5857   MolotovCocktail   2025 Feb 5, 1:53pm  

zzyzzx says

https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1ifmteo/my_home_has_been_on_the_market_for_100_days/

My home has been on the market for 100 days. Should I pull it and rent it at a loss?

The commentary is priceless!


But the experts on PatNet told me....
5858   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 1:57pm  

Okie-Arkie median Rent: ~$1100
Okie Arkie median wage: ~$50k/year

FL median Rent: ~$1800
FL median wage: ~$53k/year
5859   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 2:00pm  

zzyzzx says


The commentary is priceless!


Awesome.

The problem is that his rent needs to rise at least $800 to meet his mortgage payments, heh.

"You can't stop what's comin', that's vanity" - Old Sheriff in No Country For Old Men.
5860   WookieMan   2025 Feb 5, 2:42pm  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says

But the experts on PatNet told me....

You always say this. How is my market doing? Sorry you live in a shit area. That sucks. Wish you luck.
5861   AD   2025 Feb 5, 6:16pm  

AmericanKulak says


Florida is facing the ol' problem of "I want somebody cheap to serve me coffee and wipe my ass, but I don't want them living near me and I want my rental income to be very high" in a state with very little non-service industry (tourism, urinal bag changing).

No state income tax is great for a Minnesota retired teacher or NJ Fireman, but not as important for $18/hr young workers. The latter are better off with an income tax, but 20% higher wages with the same or lower housing costs. And many people tire of 90F/90%H in June-August; Young working people can't just stop working at their office, retail, medical job , hop in an RV, or guest bedroom surf relatives back north in Summer.


I'm seeing home sales volume at lot in Florida (listed on Zillow) at 20% to 25% below all-time high market price levels set in early 2022 when the 30 yr mortgage rate was 3%.

Also I'm seeing rents for 3 bedroom/2.5 bath townhomes in Panama City Beach around $2100, say price back in 2022.

It looks like we are in the phase of the latest Florida boom-bust-repeat cycle of household income catching up with housing costs like rent.

Also property insurance (as well as auto insurance) premiums are at worse staying the same as 2022 price levels, see below.

.........................................................

MIAMI, Fla. (WJHG/WECP) - During a press conference on Wednesday, Governor Ron DeSantis provided an update on Florida’s insurance market.

“Today I announced that Citizens Property Insurance will be instituting homeowners’ insurance premium decreases for three-quarters of Miami Dade, and statewide decreases averaging 5.6%.

.
5862   AD   2025 Feb 5, 6:32pm  

I was doing a Cap Rate estimate for a friend of mine's Panama City Beach townhome (3 bedroom/2.5 bath/2 car garage/built in 2017)

I figured your Cap(italization) Rate for your unit on $2200 rent/month on a sales price of 75% of its historic market price (set in early 2022) is AT LEAST 4.78%.

I'm noticing a lot of liquidity or sales volume for all over Florida (within my search of Zillow) for prices at 75% of all time price levels.

I am putting a spreadsheet together (along with a local rent to household income graph) in regards to this, and a News Herald journalist invited me to submit a guest column, but I'm honestly too fearful I may step on toes (like very big toes at the Central Panhandle Association of Realtors).

I used 75% (to all-time high of $335K) to take into account the seller covering most of the closing costs, etc.

[ { ($2,200 gross - $1,200 costs) x 12 } / (75% x $335,000) ] x 100% = ? ? ?

($12,000 / $251250) x 100% = 4.78%

I figure 8.78% annual ROI after adding 4% historical annual increase in townhome value, which is TAX FREE (via straight line depreciation, 1033 swap and then move into unit for 2 years to realize capital gains tax break of at least $250K)

I have the Professor Robert Shiller data that shows historical annual appreciation of 4% since the 1950s.

estimated $1,200 month/expenses :
$450: HOA fee
$400: prop tax and insurance
$150: M&R ( maint+repair includes 20 yr floor replacement, appliance replacement, etc )
$200: Century 21 Commander Realty property manager (or an equivalent LLC prop mgr)
5863   AD   2025 Feb 5, 7:05pm  

.

A couple each earning $18/hour in the hospitality and service industry (or working for one of the major hospitals) could afford $2200/month rent for the townhome mentioned in my previous post #5872 and not pay more than around 35% of gross household income for rent.

The townhome community has some amenities like clubhouse, gym, pool, and its gated.

And its within 15 minutes of drive (with traffic congestion) of the beach's epicenter for hospitality and service jobs.

.
5864   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 7:11pm  

AD says


A couple each earning $18/hour in the hospitality and service industry (or working for one of the major hospitals) could afford $2200/month rent for the townhome mentioned in my previous post #5872 and not pay more than around 35% of gross household income for rent.

So about a little less than half their income on rent after tax and payroll tax on housing. On the $2500 that remains, they have to pay for a car, gas, insurance, renter's insurance, at least $100-200/month health care for their employee portion assuming no illnesses and they have excellent health care field and not shitty hospitality employer coverage, price of eggs, milk, etc.

And somehow also save $40k for a downpayment on a house.

Or they can forget the American dream despite being DINKs and have to take a bus to go shopping and to work like a Europoor from the 60s.

Lowered Expectations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZi41b1zcIU

Once upon a single 20-year old HS grad with a job but without a car was considered a total loser.

And yet, productivity has skyrocketed.
5865   AD   2025 Feb 5, 7:19pm  

AmericanKulak says


So about a little less than half their income on rent before tax and payroll tax on housing. On the $2500 that remains, they have to pay for a car, gas, insurance, renter's insurance, at least $100-200/month health care for their employee portion assuming no illnesses and they have excellent health care field and not shitty hospitality employer coverage, price of eggs, milk, etc.


$6,120 gross household income per month ($18/hr for each member of the couple)
$5,202 assumed net household income (worst case is 15% total effective tax rate since no Florida state income tax)
$3,002 assume net household income after rent

I think likely I'm low balling at $18 per hour wage rate based on what I've first hand observed such as in my townhome HOA.

.
5866   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 7:26pm  

AD says


$6,120 gross household income per month ($18/hr for each member of the couple)

18*40=720
720*4=2880
2880*2=5760

5760*.85 (which is a Way Too Low estimate of tax/payroll for DINK being only 15%)=$4900

$4900-$2200= $2700
$2700 - supergenerous only $200/month/couple employee share health care cost = $2500

No Car, Grocery, FPL, phone, utillities factored in yet.
5867   AD   2025 Feb 5, 7:43pm  

AmericanKulak says


$6,120 gross household income per month ($18/hr for each member of the couple)

18*40=720
720*4=2880
2880*2=5760

5760*.85 (which is a Way Too Low estimate of tax/payroll for DINK being only 15%)=$4900

$4900-$2200= $2700
$2700 - supergenerous only $200/month/couple employee share health care cost = $2500

No Car, Grocery, FPL, phone, utillities factored in yet.


$18 per hour per person x 2 people x 2040 hours per year = $73,440 per year (or $6,210 per month)

Walmart Front Beach Road gives at least 2 weeks vacation time from what I was told for its +30 hours per week employees from what I was told by neighbors

utilities (electric, water/sewer, internet) : $250 per month
2 cell phones: $50 a month
groceries: $500 a month
used car costs: $350 a month
Walmart covers healthcare costs or its heavily subsidized thru the Affordable Care Act
.
5868   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 8:30pm  

AD says


utilities (electric, water/sewer, internet) : $250 per month
2 cell phones: $50 a month
groceries: $500 a month
used car costs: $350 a month
Walmart covers healthcare costs or its heavily subsidized thru the Affordable Care Act
.

This is a helluva barebones budget for DINKs.

$500/month per person on groceries, right?

About $750 for a couple would be the lowest reasonalbe budget, including all cleaning and hygiene supplies from Windex to Right Guard to Dish Soap to Tampons, digital coupon cutting, never Publix ro Whole Foods, but not mostly Ramen and boxed Mac n' Cheese, with meat and fresh vegetables in most meals. With no alcohol, not even a six-pack, and few snacks. Assuming they only get food out once a week or less.

If they ate like ghetto trash and just subsisted on Great Value soy snacks and Ramen, they might pull $600/month if they were hardcore shoppers about it. They make too much for EBT for sure.

My elderly mom spends $120/week on herself, with the Early Bird specials out 3-4x / week with the girls after Scrabble and the Club House Movie. She also uses grinds twice, second time for decaf and other Depression era tricks, including using rags not paper towels.

My FPL bill is about $150 June-September and $80 the rest of the year for a less than 900 sq ft apt. that gets a breeze from both coast and intercoastal.

My car insurance, with a 2022 mini-SUV, and squeaky clean record is almost $100/month.

$50 for two phones works for people who don't use their phones much, don't mind older phones, and are fine with a few GB/data/month. Which isn't many people under 40.
5869   clambo   2025 Feb 5, 8:36pm  

My friend who has a cute condo in Bradenton FL near Sarasota is having difficulty selling it.

Just after she put it on the market a pesky hurricane came by but spared her neighborhood.

She's lowered the asking price thousands of bucks.
5870   AD   2025 Feb 5, 8:37pm  

AmericanKulak says


AD says

utilities (electric, water/sewer, internet) : $250 per month
2 cell phones: $50 a month
groceries: $500 a month
used car costs: $350 a month
Walmart covers healthcare costs or its heavily subsidized thru the Affordable Care Act
.

$500/month per person, right?

About $800 for a couple would be the lowest, including all cleaning and hygiene supplies from Windex to Right Guard to Dish Soap, digital coupon cutting, and not mostly Ramen and boxed Mac n' Cheese, with meat and fresh vegetables in many meals. And no alcohol, not even a six-pack, and few snacks. Assuming they only get food out once a week or less.


$500 per couple (or $250/person) for groceries, hygiene and home products

You can go to Dollar Tree (really $1.25 Tree) for shampoo, toothpaste, cleaning supplies, trash bags, etc

Don't go too eccentric on wardrobe, go to TJ Maxx or Ross

My wife and I can make a chicken soup meal (with egg noodles) that only costs $10 at Walmart and it lasts for 3 dinners ($4 in chicken legs, $1.50 carrots, $1.50 yellow onion, $3 miscellaneous) for our household of 3

You can get very cheap beer and wine at Walmart Front Beach Rd ... I saw a 1.5 L of Moscato white wine for around $9,

and $17 for a 24 pack of Miller HIgh Life (which is one of the best American made beer besides Yuengling Lager at $23 for 24 cans)...the beer alone would last me for about 2 to 3 weeks since I would only drink of Friday and Saturday nights

.
5871   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 8:38pm  

AD says


$500 per couple (or $250/person) for groceries, hygiene and home products

No way. I spend $130/week for myself with 2 kids (10 days/month) and I am the DG/Winn-Dixie Points Fu MASTER, use mostly generic, cook most meals from scratch, etc. My kids are pre-teens and don't need so much hygiene products.

Ain't no way you're getting a chick under 40 (or most women period) to buy all their nail polish and shit at dollar stores for $1.25, either. Or everything from Ross. Insist and you'll be a SINK pretty soon. Also, while I buy dish soap, boxed milk, etc. at DG, some shit I wouldn't touch with a 10 foot pole. RFK will probably have it banned in a few months.

I beat on clothes though, everything comes from Bealls Outlet. It's actually CHEAPER than the thrift stores. Ours is the busiest Bealls Outlet in the country, which means I get kid's shorts for $3.99 and shirts for myself for $4.99 all the time.
5872   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 8:49pm  

AD says


utilities (electric, water/sewer, internet) : $250 per month
2 cell phones: $50 a month
groceries: $500 a month
used car costs: $350 a month
Walmart covers healthcare costs or its heavily subsidized thru the Affordable Care Act

Also: Gas is ~$3/gal, it's $33 to fill a tank once a week or ~$130/month.
And I don't see car insurance.
Used cars almost never have any covered maintenance at all.

Imagine if they had a kid.

That's the reason Florida has a NET outflow of under 40s. The extra $700 they save on Rent is a week's extra pay and the funding of a downpayment stash or 401k/IRA. The beach - and the 90F/90% summers - are no reason to spin wheels endlessly.
5873   AD   2025 Feb 5, 9:18pm  

AmericanKulak says


Also: Gas is ~$3/gal, it's $33 to fill a tank once a week or ~$130/month.
And I don't see car insurance.
Used cars almost never have any covered maintenance at all.

Imagine if they had a kid.

That's the reason Florida has a NET outflow of under 40s. The extra $700 they save on Rent is a week's extra pay and the funding of a downpayment stash or 401k/IRA. The beach - and the 90F/90% summers - are no reason to spin wheels endlessly.


The car costs of $350 takes into account cheap insurance ~$65, gas (only drive no more than 5 miles to work), maintenance, and $150 a month car payment.

When it gets 90 degrees in Panama City Beach, the relative humidity is usually no more than 55% and please don't ask me to convert this to heat index level, and it's usually beach going weather from 21 February to 21 November here.

There is extra money to be made here in Florida as working 4 hours on Door dash on Friday night will result in net profit of $80 (assume 30 cents a mile expense).

Plus women do well bartending on weekends as I know some that just bartend on Friday nights.

If you have a kid under 18 then you get a subsidy (Earned Income Credit) as a lot of young families do in my townhome neighborhood.

.
5874   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Feb 5, 9:27pm  

AD says


The car costs of $350 takes into account cheap insurance ~$65, gas (only drive no more than 5 miles to work), maintenance, and $150 a month car payment.

Dude, c'mon.

I'm a middle aged squeaky clean driver with a 2022 modest small SUV paying $90/month for me alone.

$150 car payment? In 2010? Much less 2025? You can't get that from Ghetto n' Sons.

A 2010 Honda with 100k+ miles is $280/month with good or better credit
https://www.carvana.com/vehicle/3452524?refSource=srp

2012 Nissan Rogue with almost 60k miles...
https://www.carvana.com/vehicle/3447266?refSource=srp

And that's WITH a downpayment and 72-month term. So very easy to be underwater when the transmission or engine goes when they hit 120k miles a year or two into the 6 year loan. Also no covered oil changes, tire rotations, etc. with a used car.

If DINKS are making everything from scratch at home, never drinking, never having people over, never going out, never going beyond 5 miles from home, never eating out, never never never never, why spin wheels to be near the beach when they can't drop $8 for two ice cream cones on a Saturday. I mean, if they're beach goers I guess ... with a $64k DINK income?
5875   WookieMan   2025 Feb 6, 3:57am  

AmericanKulak says


If DINKS are making everything from scratch at home, never drinking, never having people over, never going out, never going beyond 5 miles from home, never eating out, never never never never, why spin wheels to be near the beach when they can't drop $8 for two ice cream cones on a Saturday. I mean, if they're beach goers I guess ... with a $64k DINK income?

Who the hell lives off $64k of income? Especially DINK's. Maybe have some kids and you'll get some more drive/motivation to earn. Never made less than that with my wife since we were 18 (2001). And we both went to college at the same time.

Don't look at expenses. Work smarter not harder. Buy a freezer and then fill it with half a pig and cow. You'll have a years worth of meals and leftovers for roughly $150/mo not including the freezer (one time cost). Then just do a weekly shop and get $50/wk in basics if even that. Family of 5 and we don't even touch $500/mo in groceries generally and no one is hungry.

Also being in FL go fishing and catch your meal for free. We go up to Wisconsin and catch walleye and freeze them and fry them when needed. And have buddies that fish a lot and will just give it away. There are ways to be a cheapskate when it comes to food. Gardening is another biggie and preserving. Fun hobby too. Hard in a condo, but there's ways to grow in small yards.

AmericanKulak says


And that's WITH a downpayment and 72-month term. So very easy to be underwater when the transmission or engine goes when they hit 120k miles a year or two into the 6 year loan. Also no covered oil changes, tire rotations, etc. with a used car.

You'll need new tires at some point. My place, which I think is in most states is Discount Tire. Free rotation. If an oil change is a big expense, then you don't have a local mechanic you can trust. I spend a lot on high milage oil but it's worked well for my current car. I do need exhaust work, but this is at 240k miles. All I'll say is going with a Nissan or Toyota. I know Nissan has a plant in TN, so mostly American made. I don't know what models.
5876   zzyzzx   2025 Feb 6, 4:52am  

WookieMan says


Who the hell lives off $64k of income?


A lot of retirees, I think.
5877   GNL   2025 Feb 6, 5:37am  

AD says

AmericanKulak says



So about a little less than half their income on rent before tax and payroll tax on housing. On the $2500 that remains, they have to pay for a car, gas, insurance, renter's insurance, at least $100-200/month health care for their employee portion assuming no illnesses and they have excellent health care field and not shitty hospitality employer coverage, price of eggs, milk, etc.


$6,120 gross household income per month ($18/hr for each member of the couple)
$5,202 assumed net household income (worst case is 15% total effective tax rate since no Florida state income tax)
$3,002 assume net household income after rent

I think likely I'm low balling at $18 per hour wage rate based on what I've first hand observed such as in my townhome HOA.

.

I have a friend in the Fort Myers area who makes $20/hr working for a company named HomeWatch. They check in on people's second homes to make sure there's no water leaks, weeds are tamed, cars are driven etc.
5878   WookieMan   2025 Feb 6, 6:37am  

zzyzzx says

WookieMan says

Who the hell lives off $64k of income?

A lot of retirees, I think.

How and why? They get SS if they want to. Did they not save at all? We're talking dual income. If you paid into SS you'll get $30-40k/yr for a couple if you paid in for 30-40 years a piece. If you put in $500/year or about $45/mo starting out in a Roth when you turn 18, you'll be set and can take gains out after 5 years with no penalty. Increase it as you get older. Then do 401K and hopefully have a decent match.

SS is your daily living and the retirement funds are your funny money. House should be paid off or if you rent that's fine as well. I'd rather own though outright.

Also if you're 22 and can't find a job solo that pays $64k/yr, you're not trying. Dual income? Come on. Those are McDonald's wages. I'm spoiled, but I could pull $120k in a heartbeat after a large work break. I just don't want to deal with people. Coworkers fine, but not customers. So my real estate days are done, for now.
5879   clambo   2025 Feb 6, 8:02am  

Blake, Glengarry Glen Ross: "I can go out there tonight, with the materials you got, and make $15,000. Can you? Can you?"

Unfortunately the majority of retired use social security as their major retirement income.

The average is $1788 per recipient.

I didn't plan on using social security to provide for my retirement so I'm OK; but I sure know a lot of coupon clippers and people who seek out "early bird" specials.

Nobody 18 ever thought about retirement investing; people tend to "wake up to reality" about 10 years after that age.

I have worked at several companies (although this was decades ago) which did not provide a 401K for their workers. It's probably unusual today however.
5880   zzyzzx   2025 Feb 6, 8:09am  

WookieMan says


Did they not save at all? We're talking dual income


Correct. A lot of people saved little or nothing. I'm not even referring to people with defined benefit pension plans either. Fiscal responsibility is the exception, not the norm.
5881   B.A.C.A.H.   2025 Feb 6, 8:27am  

AmericanKulak says

Also: Gas is ~$3/gal, it's $33 to fill a tank once a week or ~$130/month.
And I don't see car insurance.
Used cars almost never have any covered maintenance at all.

Imagine if they had a kid.

Here in Silicon Valley, incomes are higher, but so are costs.

Back in the day I worked nights for as many years (7) as I could so we only needed childcare a few hours a day so I could get a bit of sleep. Eventually I had to cave and work days as I'd reached the career ceiling working nights. When that happened, for the most part the childcare bills for one infant and one preschooler consumed the net of my coparent's take home. But at least her continuous max'd contributions to retirement (including social security) were uninterrupted.

I was curious and did some internet searches on current childcare costs in SFBA for infants and toddlers. It's about $30k per year per infant or toddler and sliding scale downward for older kids. In our region anyone who can afford 30K per child is in the 9% state income tax bracket and either 22% or 24% federal.

Since child care expense is on top of all the other living costs, it means to pay $30k per child is on the top of the income and so requires annual income of about $44k per child. Small wonder the SFBA is rapidly becoming an aging childless region.

(Are you paying attention, public teachers' unions?)
5882   clambo   2025 Feb 6, 8:55am  

The other option is work for government; the median income in the area near DC is double the national median.
5883   WookieMan   2025 Feb 6, 9:17am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Since child care expense is on top of all the other living costs, it means to pay $30k per child is on the top of the income and so requires annual income of about $44k per child. Small wonder the SFBA is rapidly becoming an aging childless region.

So glad to be done with that phase of life. The 4th grade and under years sucked. Yeah I enjoyed it, but you really have to be on top of it. That's why I quit my job though. They then started activities and sports and I enjoy that. I'll go back to full time work in about 2 years. Still working, but it's part time odd job stuff.

Wife travels too much. MIL is a drunk and my mom lives an hour away and my sister is a widow. So tough to ask for help. Fortunately have a solid core of neighbors and friends that can help out in a pinch. But I can work full time. Once my oldest son can drive it will be better.
5884   AD   2025 Feb 6, 10:44am  

clambo says

The other option is work for government; the median income in the area near DC is double the national median.


The average salary is at GS 14 step 3 level in the Washington DC metro area, and accounts for legions of "support contractors" as they are the ones that really do the work at the agencies.

About 25 years ago there was a transition whereas federal government civil servants make more than their "support contractor" counterparts.

They started to upgrade positions that were at GS 11 to ultimately GS 13. Notice how DC area housing (including townhomes) changed accordingly.

Now the goal is for "support contractors" to at least get a GS 13 job.

The only exception is for the legal field, whereas lawyers will get the experience working at DOJ or for a federal judge and then go work for a high dollar law firm.

.
5885   HeadSet   2025 Feb 6, 8:18pm  

AD says

Miller HIgh Life (which is one of the best American made beer besides Yuengling Lager

100% agree, and I thought I was the only one with that opinion. Miller and Yuengling are the only ones with the traditional beer taste. The others have changed over the years to taste like boilermakers or water.
5886   WookieMan   2025 Feb 6, 10:02pm  

HeadSet says

AD says

Miller HIgh Life (which is one of the best American made beer besides Yuengling Lager

100% agree, and I thought I was the only one with that opinion. Miller and Yuengling are the only ones with the traditional beer taste. The others have changed over the years to taste like boilermakers or water.

Miller High Life yes. Regular Miller or Miller light is bad. MHL used to be my beer of choice 15 years ago.

I can't mix up beer so I'm Busch Light at this point. Not looking to get hammered, just have a decent beer. Not great, but not awful. No headaches ever. On vacation I will sneak in a breakfast beer or two with room service (not at home).

If I get good sleep on the flight tomorrow, Saturday is gonna be one of those days. Hell tomorrow will be somewhat early getting our transfer. Group of 12 of us. Should be fun. I don't think most of them have done T4 at Cancun. I'm walking fast and getting 3-4 beers for the transfer at the outdoor bar

Sorry for the tangent as usual. Just getting pumped. Should be a good time.
5887   AD   2025 Feb 6, 11:15pm  

AmericanKulak says

Okie-Arkie median Rent: ~$1100
Okie Arkie median wage: ~$50k/year

FL median Rent: ~$1800
FL median wage: ~$53k/year


been finding gems at $1900 on east end of Panama City Beach like this relatively new 3 bedroom/2.5 bath/1 car garage townhome listed for at least 120 days

same townhome would have rented for $2100 back in 2022, so this tells me that local household income is catching up more with rent

https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/7652-Shadow-Lake-Dr-Panama-City-Beach-FL-32407/305989650_zpid/

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