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housing prices peak 2


               
2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   809,987 views  7,252 comments

by AD   follow (0)  

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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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6673   Blue   2025 Jul 21, 5:48pm  

The_Deplorable says

zzyzzx says

"US Home Prices Are Losing Steam With Most Big Markets Below Peak"

Is the Housing Bubble finally collapsing?

Idk but can’t crash as long as gov free printing press around and not controlling gov budgets that would make inflation intact.
6675   zzyzzx   2025 Jul 24, 7:01am  

Blue says

The_Deplorable says


zzyzzx says


"US Home Prices Are Losing Steam With Most Big Markets Below Peak"

Is the Housing Bubble finally collapsing?


Idk but can’t crash as long as gov free printing press around and not controlling gov budgets that would make inflation intact.


Which totally ignores flat incomes...
6676   zzyzzx   2025 Jul 24, 7:08am  

https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/1m7bzxh/stuck_in_a_house_we_dont_want/

Stuck in a house we don’t want
My husband and myself bought our first home a couple of years ago. We thought we wanted a townhouse but have since discovered we want a yard and no HOA. We bought our town house for way more than it was worth due to lack of knowledge and quite honestly we were shocked we were even able to buy a home. We were overly excited and jumped quickly. We paid 375000 for the thing. We went out! Our mortgage is ridiculous. We have put it on the market and it didn’t move. Lots of people came and looked but it’s priced too high, we are upside down. I feel so defeated and stupid. What can I do? Please can anyone help me?
6677   RayAmerica   2025 Jul 24, 7:31am  

But wait just a minute here! A local Realtor recently said IT'S A GREAT TIME TO BUY! She wouldn't lie, would she? I mean it's in their Code of Ethics that lying is not a good thing and being a Realtor means that she's ethical, right?
6678   WookieMan   2025 Jul 24, 7:45am  

zzyzzx says

We bought our town house for way more than it was worth due to lack of knowledge and quite honestly we were shocked we were even able to buy a home.

Lol. So someone didn't know what they were doing bought a home. At least they admit it. I'm sure it was an FHA loan. You're upside down out the gate with those loans anyway. It's basic math. You're stupid if you didn't know what you were buying. Never buy a townhome either unless elderly and don't want exterior maintenance. When young people buy townhomes I just shake my head.

Get a multiunit so that way if you move you can rent the space you lived in and pay down the mortgage. Or in this case just rent it and wait it out for 4-1/2 years roughly and relist it. Tax free gain as the tenant pays down the principle if you lived in it 2 of the last 5 years. The only other option is a short sale or you could foreclose and live for free for 2 years. You have to show you're insolvent or it's counted as income and you could have a hefty tax bill.

Also the mortgage being ridiculous is bull shit. It was disclosed to you by the lender. You knew what you were getting into. (not you as in zzyzzx in this comment). Don't point the finger at the market, use your thumb and point that at yourself for being an idiot.
6679   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 24, 9:06am  

WookieMan says

You're stupid if you didn't know what you were buying


But that is your typical buyer.
6680   WookieMan   2025 Jul 24, 10:44am  

MolotovCocktail says

WookieMan says
You're stupid if you didn't know what you were buying

But that is your typical buyer.

Or they were lied to, which is why I agree with most here to dislike realtors even though I was one. I was management though. I didn't have that evil side to lie someone into a sale. Builders are also guilty of this too. In IL you don't have to have a license to sell at say a subdivision development. You can just lie and be a snake oil salesman.
6681   RWSGFY   2025 Jul 24, 10:58am  

zzyzzx says

https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/1m7bzxh/stuck_in_a_house_we_dont_want/

Stuck in a house we don’t want
My husband and myself bought our first home a couple of years ago. We thought we wanted a townhouse but have since discovered we want a yard and no HOA. We bought our town house for way more than it was worth due to lack of knowledge and quite honestly we were shocked we were even able to buy a home. We were overly excited and jumped quickly. We paid 375000 for the thing. We went out! Our mortgage is ridiculous. We have put it on the market and it didn’t move. Lots of people came and looked but it’s priced too high, we are upside down. I feel so defeated and stupid. What can I do? Please can anyone help me?


Sit on it for 7 years.
6682   The_Deplorable   2025 Jul 24, 12:18pm  

This says the Housing Bubble is collapsing.


6683   stereotomy   2025 Jul 24, 12:24pm  

zzyzzx says

https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/1m7bzxh/stuck_in_a_house_we_dont_want/

Stuck in a house we don’t want
My husband and myself bought our first home a couple of years ago. We thought we wanted a townhouse but have since discovered we want a yard and no HOA. We bought our town house for way more than it was worth due to lack of knowledge and quite honestly we were shocked we were even able to buy a home. We were overly excited and jumped quickly. We paid 375000 for the thing. We went out! Our mortgage is ridiculous. We have put it on the market and it didn’t move. Lots of people came and looked but it’s priced too high, we are upside down. I feel so defeated and stupid. What can I do? Please can anyone help me?


Too bad there isn't gap insurance for houses . . .
6684   HeadSet   2025 Jul 24, 1:22pm  

WookieMan says


Tax free gain as the tenant pays down the principle if you lived in it 2 of the last 5 years.

True. I am glad to see you finally used the term "tax free" correctly.
6685   EBGuy   2025 Jul 24, 1:23pm  



6686   HeadSet   2025 Jul 24, 1:26pm  

zzyzzx says

We bought our town house for way more than it was worth due to lack of knowledge and quite honestly we were shocked we were even able to buy a home.

This is why I hate easy money. Whether it be cars or houses, good old "How-Much-A-Month" clowns drive up prices for everyone. Easy loans also drove college costs out of sight.
6687   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 24, 1:31pm  

The_Deplorable says

This says the Housing Bubble is collapsing.






6690   FreeAmericanDOP   2025 Jul 25, 8:17am  

Homeloaners better wise up and drop them prices!
6692   ForcedTQ   2025 Jul 25, 2:17pm  

The problem is most times the landlord of the older more affordable apartment raises the rent up to almost parity with the new apartments many times without doing any renovations.
6693   HeadSet   2025 Jul 26, 6:30am  

ForcedTQ says

The problem is most times the landlord of the older more affordable apartment raises the rent up to almost parity with the new apartments many times without doing any renovations.

How? Wouldn't the addition of new apartments put downward pressure on prices? If new apartments and worn old apartments have a similar price, wouldn't the tenants opt for the new place?
6694   ForcedTQ   2025 Jul 26, 7:29am  

That may be the case if there was no pent up demand waiting to occupy, but in areas where there are still people living multiple families to a house or apartment or multiple people per room, there is unsatisfied demand that will gobble up that supply at the right price point.
6695   GNL   2025 Jul 26, 8:27am  

It really comes down to government regulations and greed. Greed has to be looked at and how it is supported. If you want to get insanely rich and quickly, all you need to do is control the supply of something society needs.
6696   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2025 Jul 26, 12:03pm  

ForcedTQ says

The problem is most times the landlord of the older more affordable apartment raises the rent up to almost parity with the new apartments many times without doing any renovations.


In places where building is severely restricted like the SF bay area yes. Otherwise no.
6697   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 26, 12:14pm  

ForcedTQ says


That may be the case if there was no pent up demand waiting to occupy, but in areas where there are still people living multiple families to a house or apartment or multiple people per room, there is unsatisfied demand that will gobble up that supply at the right price point.


Did you read this? https://x.com/michael_wiebe/status/1837257325759058259

Because that is exactly what is happening in Austin right now.


6698   B.A.C.A.H.   2025 Jul 28, 1:49pm  

ForcedTQ says


The problem is those people that live in the high cost places will not easily/readily be willing to sell at a lower price …. Even if the market tanks so long as they have their source of income….

According to the response of an AI query I made, only between 3% to 4% of existing homes are bought/sold in the Bay Area each year. It means that the huge majority of homes have been owned for a long time. I will use mine in SJ as an example. I looked it up on one of the ®eal Estate websites. According to that web site, the value is $1.1 M, down from about $1.4 M at the peak in 2022 (*).

Provided I haven't been serially refinancing to extract equity, if I want to sell to relocate to a cheaper place I am not going to care if I've "lost" 300k equity that I really didn't have anyway. I will just sell at the lower price. This is the typical seller who didn't serially take out equity with new loans. I've known a few of them who sold and moved to the Sierra Foothills or Central Valley over the years. They didn't care so much about catching the exact Peakest Best Price.

I pay attention to the homes in my neighborhood that sell. It's mostly the same ones. Recent buyers selling, to "flip", or more often I think, to get out from the burden of the super high mortgage payments and tax bills of their recent purchases. Most of the other 97% or so of the homes don't change hands except for the occasional retiree I mentioned in the previous paragraph.

(*) There was a contributor to this blog who wanted you all to know that he was from our Cool And Hip Bay Area, as his handle was "BayArea" with a picture of the Golden Gate Bridge. He shared that he bought a place in the leafy suburban paradise Tri-Valley in 2022, ("bought at the peak") and then didn't contribute to the blog any more. So we don't know how it turned out for Mister BayArea.
6699   Blue   2025 Jul 28, 2:56pm  

CA 1978 Prop 13 sounds like helping homeowners pay property taxes based on purchase price. The downside is, all homeowners are stuck in their own houses!
Without new young families with kids, schools can’t survive.
I fought on nextdoor app since for a decade the dark cloud are on the way for the entire areas with school closures. Most thought I was crazy.
Look around, it is happening now as most cities are becoming retirement communities.
You go around and find out the 4, 5 bedrooms houses left with one or two old people!
They are meant for young families and raise their kids and send them to neighborhood schools. Not too many young people can move to Bay Area or other metro area in CA and pay higher prices and taxes.
Most homeowners are now counting on floating people in rental apartments to keep their schools open to keep their home values intact!
At some point CA must revoke Prop 13 and truck loads of its derivative laws and join the rest of the country to make CA great again!
6700   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 28, 4:57pm  

Blue says

I fought on nextdoor app since for a decade the dark cloud are on the way for the entire areas with school closures


That had to do with collapse in families.
6701   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 28, 5:00pm  

Blue says


truck loads of its derivative laws and join the rest of the country to make CA great again!


No way.

You don't seem to be aware the seniors can transfer their Prop 13 valuation ONCE. The new property has to be valued at or below the property that they are selling. My parents did that.
6702   B.A.C.A.H.   2025 Jul 28, 6:09pm  

Blue says


The downside is, all homeowners are stuck in their own houses!

Not really. They can sell, they'll just lose their Prop-13 tax assessment. And that's not exactly true anyway because if they buy another less expensive home, they can "transfer" their assessment to the newly purchased home. They're not stuck: they have options.
Blue says


You go around and find out the 4, 5 bedrooms houses left with one or two old people!

Yes, during the pandemic I delivered for meals on wheels to many such clients.

Blue says


They are meant for young families and raise their kids and send them to neighborhood schools.

Yup. That's why I hope the prices will drop by half, so local kids can buy and have their own kids. Because of the insanely high prices due to low inventory turnover, a drop in value by half will mean most of the Old Folks will still have a gain, and likely still above the max-married-couple half million exclusion gain.

But rentiers like iwog and Eman won't allow that drop to happen. They'll swoop in and buy the dip to expand their Rental Empires to exploit even more folks of modest means.
6703   Blue   2025 Jul 28, 6:38pm  

MolotovCocktail says

Blue says


I fought on nextdoor app since for a decade the dark cloud are on the way for the entire areas with school closures


That had to do with collapse in families.

I doubt unless you see similar things in other states for comparison.
The biggest dent of prop 13 comes actually from businesses though.
6704   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 28, 6:52pm  

Blue says


I doubt unless you see similar things in other states for comparison.


Sorry pal, but I was born and raised in San Jose. One of my elementary schools I attended in 1978 - 1980 was shut down in the 1990s. Not enough kids in the district. Last I heard it was rented out to a child care company.

That was way back then. More have since been shut down. Same reason. Almost everyone I went to school with bailed. Too unaffordable even back then when a $300k house was a shocking number.

Some may have reopened because of the surge in H1Bs and illegals over the past 20 years tho. The ones that weren't torn down.
6705   The_Deplorable   2025 Jul 28, 9:40pm  

Blue says

"CA 1978 Prop 13 sounds like helping homeowners pay property taxes based on purchase price."

And that enables the people of California to control their taxes.

"At some point CA must revoke Prop 13 and truck loads of its derivative laws and join the rest of the country to make CA great again!"

No. The 30 year old Housing Bubble needs to collapse.
6706   ForcedTQ   2025 Jul 28, 9:47pm  

Also, need to look at the data for total state taxes collected per capita and state expenses per capita. Compare that to the other states. Betcha CA is in top 5 in both. That means the problem isn’t going to be fixed with higher property taxes, that just increases your rent payment to the government….

We give away far too much in benefits programs to illegals and bullshit programs. Need to reign all that garbage spending in!
6707   Blue   2025 Jul 28, 10:45pm  

The_Deplorable says


Blue says

No. The 30 year old Housing Bubble needs to collapse.

Prop 13 is one of the major one in home prices apart from so many other factors.
Snake oil Prop 13 was dead on arrival as per the design. If I remember correctly, within 4 years Mello-Roos taxes were introduced to tackle prop 13 tax offset!
No state suffered because lack of a law like Ponzi scheme prop 13 which created unnatural environment and it’s consequences.
Again the real benefits goes to business at the expense of the rest by paying highly unequal and lowest property taxes. Their ill effects are seen on the rest of the economy through indirect means.

The origin of pro 13 came from rich people in LA area who don’t want to pay taxes that goes to schools while sending their kids to private schools!

6708   Glock-n-Load   2025 Jul 29, 4:14am  

The_Deplorable says

Blue says


"CA 1978 Prop 13 sounds like helping homeowners pay property taxes based on purchase price."

And that enables the people of California to control their taxes.

"At some point CA must revoke Prop 13 and truck loads of its derivative laws and join the rest of the country to make CA great again!"

No. The 30 year old Housing Bubble needs to collapse.

I’m not so sure it’s a bubble. Obviously plenty of people are still buying homes. I think we’re watching a bifurcation in the economy. It’s becoming more apparent. Society is best when everyone can participate. Even poor people need affordable to them housing.
6709   GNL   2025 Jul 29, 5:03am  

Even smart and responsible people can be very short sighted.

I'm on an entrepreneur subreddit and I came across a post where the OP was bitching about people not wanting to work hard and build businesses. Instead, his words, they want to sit at a desk and be internet millionaires. While he's not entirely wrong, what he misses is 1. He's a 4th generation farmer. Think about that. He was born into a lifelong job that most people can only dream of having. You have to think about that for a moment. That farm was built over 3 generations before he got it. And 2. All new things are built from scratch. Many people only have their wits and labor to produce something so, yes, the internet has helped tremendously.
6710   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 29, 8:46am  

GNL says

Even smart and responsible people can be very short sighted.

I'm on an entrepreneur subreddit and I came across a post where the OP was bitching about people not wanting to work hard and build businesses. Instead, his words, they want to sit at a desk and be internet millionaires. While he's not entirely wrong, what he misses is 1. He's a 4th generation farmer. Think about that. He was born into a lifelong job that most people can only dream of having. You have to think about that for a moment. That farm was built over 3 generations before he got it. And 2. All new things are built from scratch. Many people only have their wits and labor to produce something so, yes, the internet has helped tremendously.


out here lots of farmers who are 2nd and 3rd generation. inherited business and everything organized and streamlined years ago. they don’t complain here.
6711   B.A.C.A.H.   2025 Jul 29, 12:14pm  

Fortwaye says

out here lots of farmers who are 2nd and 3rd generation

Where is out here?
6712   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jul 29, 12:24pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Where is out here?


Everywhere.

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