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MolotovCocktail says
What person who needs to get a FHA loan has the $$$ to buy down points?
I understand as I am addressing the $240,000 to $310,000 price range for a 3 bedroom, 2 car garage townhome within 2 miles of white sands beaches in Florida panhandle.
And as I said, this year marks a second year that property insurance prices are going down in Florida such as with Ovation Insurance.
And property taxes still are the same for las 4 years in Panama City Florida metro area, as well as my HOA charging the same HOA assessment in 2026 as they did in 2022.
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AD says
MolotovCocktail says
What person who needs to get a FHA loan has the $$$ to buy down points?
I understand as I am addressing the $240,000 to $310,000 price range for a 3 bedroom, 2 car garage townhome within 2 miles of white sands beaches in Florida panhandle.
And as I said, this year marks a second year that property insurance prices are going down in Florida such as with Ovation Insurance.
And property taxes still are the same for las 4 years in Panama City Florida metro area, as well as my HOA charging the same HOA assessment in 2026 as they did in 2022.
.
That has nothing to do with buying points on a mortgage.
Yes it does.
I see it firsthand in my townhome HOA as far as sellers offering to buy discount points (up to 4 points to lower the FHA rate from 6% to 5%), and it costs them around 4% of average mortgage balance of $270,000 or $10,800.
The sellers have the cash to offer this.
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I see it firsthand in my townhome HOA as far as sellers offering to buy discount points (up to 4 points to lower the FHA rate from 6% to 5%), and it costs them around 4% of average mortgage balance of $270,000 or $10,800.
AD says
Yes it does.
I see it firsthand in my townhome HOA as far as sellers offering to buy discount points (up to 4 points to lower the FHA rate from 6% to 5%), and it costs them around 4% of average mortgage balance of $270,000 or $10,800.
The sellers have the cash to offer this.
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You went on about property taxes, not this. Go re-read what you wrote. https://patrick.net/comment?comment_id=2212817
And even so, its anecdotal. And it doesn't show up in listings prices so most buyers wouldn't know about it. And many strapped sellers won't have the cash to do this.
S.F. housing giant Veritas defaults on $652M debt. 66 buildings now face foreclosure.
1,566 units in five dozen buildings may represent entire San Francisco portfolio of city’s former No. 1 landlord ...
Veritas did not immediately respond to a request for comment. CEO Yat-Pang Au did not respond to a late Wednesday message.
If a sale were to proceed, a buyer would likely purchase the entire tranche of 66 buildings. Tenants would not face eviction, but their landlord would change.
The Veritas loan has an unpaid principal balance of $551 million that first came due in March 2024, according to the notice. Veritas also failed to pay $1.1 million in property taxes, according to the notice. ...
As a landlord, Veritas has long drawn the ire of tenant advocates. Many of its tenants have organized as the Veritas Tenants Association and withheld rent to improve housing conditions. Tenants have alleged harassment and neglect, and sued the company multiple times.
In 2022, its property management subsidiary warned residents in its San Francisco properties that they could be evicted for organizing by distributing “literature” and hanging signs on doors. Earlier this year, tenants who organized a rent strike at one of its buildings were reportedly threatened with eviction.
The Royal Bank of Canada has pursued San Francisco borrowers before. Its RBC Real Estate Capital arm in June 2024 took over 1,200 San Francisco housing units from owners Goldman Sachs and Ballast Investments after they defaulted on $687.5 million in loans.

AD says
I see it firsthand in my townhome HOA as far as sellers offering to buy discount points (up to 4 points to lower the FHA rate from 6% to 5%), and it costs them around 4% of average mortgage balance of $270,000 or $10,800.
I can see how paying points rather than dropping price would entice a buyer since lowing the rate from 6% to 5% on $270,000 would save about $170/mo for the buyer while lowering the price to $259,000 would only save about $66/mo. Also, the realtor is happy since the higher price is better for commission and comps.
One bell weather as Invitation Homes is the largest owners of single family rental homes in the USA.

When homeowners can’t find buyers for their properties, they usually have three options: lower the price, remove the listing, or convert the home into a rental. By tracking recent for-sale listings that were converted to rentals, Parcl Labs, a housing data and analytics firm, found that “accidental landlords” — homeowners who chose the last option — were becoming more common, especially in the country’s Sun Belt region.
The “accidental landlord” trend is accelerating, the researchers found, particularly in markets where large institutional investors — businesses that own more than 1,000 single-family homes — hold a substantial chunk of available properties. Since the end of the pandemic, those large investors have flocked to the states lining the bottom of the United States from coast to coast, chasing job and population growth. But surging inventory and a declining number of buyers have given rise to a competitive crop of former sellers who are now “accidental landlords.” Most are individual owners competing with those large institutional investors in the rental market.
Six Sun Belt markets — Houston, Dallas, Phoenix, Tampa, Fla., Atlanta and Charlotte, N.C. — contain 37 percent of large institutional real estate nationwide, according to Parcl Labs. Accidental landlords have increased in five out of the six cities.
Yes. But HOW does that get communicated in listings to potential buyers and their agents?
Emphasize it in the listing like in the Zillow description for the home, and get the word passed to the buyers agents.
Yes. But HOW does that get communicated in listings to potential buyers and their agents?
Say Joe & Jill Sixpack would-be homebuyer get pre-approved for $XXX,XXX amount of a mortgage. Their realtard™ knows this. So any listing more gets filtered out.
MolotovCocktail says
Yes. But HOW does that get communicated in listings to potential buyers and their agents?
I do not know how it is communicated, but I do remember the "3-2-1 buydown" that was popular in the 80s when interests rates were as high as 20%. Somehow the work got out.
MolotovCocktail says
Say Joe & Jill Sixpack would-be homebuyer get pre-approved for $XXX,XXX amount of a mortgage. Their realtard™ knows this. So any listing more gets filtered out.
Unless the realtard™ filters by price the buyers could afford if the rate was at the buydown amount.
AD says
Emphasize it in the listing like in the Zillow description for the home, and get the word passed to the buyers agents.
That's a shitty way of doing it if the agent filters out houses by listing prices their client can't afford.
The sellers agent tells the buyer agents about this, as they market the home with that offer to buy up to 4 discount points.
AD says
The sellers agent tells the buyer agents about this, as they market the home with that offer to buy up to 4 discount points.
The seller agent the buyer agent never contacts in the first place because the property is filtered out in the listing search to begin with?
What is so difficult about this to understand?
What you continue to not recognize is I go with a local large real estate company like Counts which has a lot of buyer agents.
My sellers agent contacts his friends in Counts who are buyer agents representing buyers and tells them about a townhome sale that is offering up to 4 discount points.
I know this because my wife's friend who has been a real estate agent for at least 25 years told us that is how it works in the Florida panhandle.
And what you also seem to not recognize is most of the buyers I've spoken with in our townhome HOA told me they used Zillow as a way to look at properties they are interested in, and did not get spoon fed by their buyers agent.
1) Your story is anecdotal. Fine for you but in no way addresses the points I have made for everyone else in the aggregate. Big clue for you: Rest of the country isn't the Florida panhandle. You are like Someone-else-on-PatNet-I-don't-care-to-start-another-thread-rage-right-now in this way.
I just give a shit about the best place on Earth which is the Florida panhandle.
that I have done the same as other buyers in my townhome HOA as far as look at listings on Zillow and read the descriptions like what incentives are offered like seller to offer money to buy mortgage points, etc.
You telling me that only the Florida panhandle has sophisticated buyers like those who will read the descriptions in the Zillow listings ?

Nope. Because not even in the Florida is your average buyer 'sophisticated'.
And even if they were, your avg seller doesn't have the fucking money to pony up for this, either.
DemoralizerOfPanicans says
https://wolfstreet.com/2025/09/29/the-lock-in-effect-and-mortgage-rates-update-on-unwinding-a-phenomenon-that-wrecked-the-housing-market/
The only way out of this trap is to lower the price of homes, which lowers the underlying price assessment for insurance and property taxes.
Looks like about 70% of mortgages are no more than at an interest rate of 5%.
Prices now down around 15% from all time high price set in early 2022 in Panama City Beach.
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MolotovCocktail says
Nope. Because not even in the Florida is your average buyer 'sophisticated'.
How the fuck do you know ? You live in the Democrat shithole California.

Actually surprised it's not more on the downswing.
WookieMan says
Actually surprised it's not more on the downswing.
Agreed. And deportation of illegals is going to hit cities like Vegas hard.
yes, 18 U.S.C. § 1343
no way it is not a fake post


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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.