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Looks like money laundering.
The thing that could change this overnight is if a material number of these comfortable home owners lost their jobs.
everyone is going to know that the government caused the drop because they raised interest rates.
The Fed is supposed to have a mandate for price stability. When they intentionally drop the price of the largest asset most families have by 20% putting millions of families upside down on their houses' equity, expect some shit.
For the 7-14 million families that bought their houses at the inflated price and now cannot make the mortgage payment because of consumer price inflation, dropping the price of their house by raising mortgage rates, puts them in a bind. They cannot sell to get out of the trap.
When they intentionally drop the price of the largest asset most families have by 20% putting millions of families upside down on their houses' equity
Most homeowners did not over borrow (at fixed rates, bro) to over pay for a crapshack in the past couple
Anyone who bought in the last 2 years overpaid though.
Rents ain't gonna drop because there is a housing shortage and new construction has basically stopped. Add a few more million illegals and you get what you get. With OER and rent making up about a third of the CPI we need more housing. The FED has fucked themselves.
With mortgage rates at over 6%, they are high, having doubled in the past 18 months.
The government does set interest rates. It can buy up unlimited amounts of mortgage bonds
zzyzzx says
Looks like money laundering.
Misc says
everyone is going to know that the government caused the drop because they raised interest rates.
No, the government created the ridiculous run-up in house prices (and other asset prices) by keeping interest rates stupidly and artificially low. What is happening now is just a correction. Saying the government caused a real estate house price crash by raising rates is like a drunk blaming his hangover on the fact he stopped drinking.
It is not the price of the house that changes (although it does to a certain extent because of inflation). It costs about the same to build a house from year to year. It is really the price of the land that changes. When you think that historically 80% of the purchase price of a SFH was the house and the other 20% the value of the land with a total price move of 20% you see how 3rd world the US real estate market is.
The FED has fucked themselves.
How has the FED fucked themselves when they never experience any consequences? No, we're the ones who get fucked.
B.A.C.A.H. says
Most homeowners did not over borrow (at fixed rates, bro) to over pay for a crapshack in the past couple
Anyone who bought in the last 2 years overpaid though.
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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.