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The real estate market is crazy right now
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09-03-2022, 10:19 PM | #354 | |
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09-04-2022, 12:57 PM | #355 | |
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My current house is locked in under 3%, anything we'd be interested in would be double the price of our current house at 5% even though we have strong credit/income for our area. |
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09-04-2022, 01:03 PM | #356 |
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I think it's human nature to believe as soon as the economy starts to turn negative, the music stops immediately and everyone stops buying at once. Reality is there is still slack in the market and those buyers who have been desperate to find a home are going to pay, even at these rates. Albeit, the buyer pool may be smaller, but there's so much pent up demand that it's going to take a while to flush out. Same thing with the car market.
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09-05-2022, 11:31 PM | #357 | |
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Total cost: $700,000 (30 Year Fixed Loan) 20% down payment: $140,000 Annual Property Tax: $9,000 Annual Homeowner's Insurance: $2,800 If the mortgage rate is 3%, then the monthly mortgage would be $3,347 per month. If the mortgage rate is 6%, then the monthly mortgage would be $4,343 per month. In my opinion, most people who are looking at a home at this price range would be able to find a way to cover the additional $1,000 per month but again, everyone's situation is different, e.g. daycare costs, pre-existing medical costs, etc. Either way, the rate increase sucks and I can see people not wanting to pay that additional cost but that just means you are most likely wasting thousands of dollars every month to rent which does not hold any value in the end.
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09-06-2022, 06:44 AM | #358 |
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I'm on the opposite side of the argument: I think that there are significantly more people who are really stretching their budgets to the limit than we are admitting.
There are a lot of "$30,000 millionaires" out there. Tightening credit and worsening inflation is going to expose the fact that, especially in boom markets, there's a way to go before bottom. In hot markets, there's at least a 40% drop coming, easily. The worst part is that you might be catching a falling knife for a while - it could take 2-3 years before single family real estate bottoms. Depending on how QT impacts liquidity in markets, assets outside of commodities are right now riding a bear market rally. Go back to the .com bubble of 2001-2002 for a good idea of how this might play out. Final thought: think seriously about 8% mortgages and what that will do to the real estate market. |
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09-06-2022, 06:48 AM | #359 | |
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Similarly, if you made this massive investment and then valuations tank by 40% or more - unless you've got a financial reason to sell, you're probably *really* not going to want to sell. Again, limiting supply. |
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09-06-2022, 06:12 PM | #360 | |
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Our mortgage payment is about 1/9 of our monthly take home. The banks say we could do 1/3 of our gross, but that's just stupid. That's why people think having nice cars, going out to eat, going on vacations is a huge deal..........it's because they've made themselves house poor. |
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09-06-2022, 07:32 PM | #361 | |
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My grandparents' post-war home was financed with a 20-year mortgage, which seems to have been common back then but is no longer readily available. Looking back, we'll be paid off in 20 years so it may be something for the finance market to ponder. (Disclaimer, we started out with a 30-year ARM that was so good for us that the bank wanted out of the deal, and re-financed it into a 15-year fixed at 2.75% with only a minimal increase in the monthly payment amount....)
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09-06-2022, 07:51 PM | #362 | |
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09-06-2022, 08:05 PM | #363 |
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You would have paid it off last year if you stuck with it. Just saying.....
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09-06-2022, 08:15 PM | #364 | |
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09-07-2022, 09:15 AM | #365 | |
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Which goes back to my point about people overextending themselves when it comes to buying a home. I bought my current house on the idea of "If one of us loses our job, has a medical issue, etc, we may not be able to afford all the fun stuff, but we won't lose our house." The vast majority of Americans don't use the same the thought process. They think everything is always going to be great and they will never have any hardship. |
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09-07-2022, 02:36 PM | #366 | |
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I'm sure that I posted the story of what happened after that. The bubble popped, and the ARM formula that they used had interest terms that never envisioned 0% government money. For consumer protection, the regulators made them put in a 0.5% annual cap for ARM rate increases, but had no cap on decreases. When the first adjustment hit, our rate dropped to essentially zero...and they could only increase it by 0.5% per year because of the ceiling! In other words, it would have taken them five years to get the rate back above 2.5%. They sold our money-losing loan off to a shady bank right before they collapsed, and we went straight to our credit union to lock in a 2.75% re-fi for 15 years for about the same payment that I was already making. I've been paying the new one at a 10-12 year pace, and will have it paid off in a bit over two more years if all goes well. My DW and I celebrated the month that we finally went net-positive financially, and there's no f-in-weigh that we will ever be negative worth ever again as long as I'm alive and can work.....
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09-07-2022, 02:42 PM | #367 |
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Bahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh I think I moved too slow on a deal. 70 * 320 ft lot across the street with a decrepit knock down, was listed at $1.9M, I felt that was high. Saw it drop to 1.7 and said to the wife we should look at it, see what a modest 2700 sq ft home would cost to build.
It sold in a day dammit. |
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09-07-2022, 03:22 PM | #368 |
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And you get to watch someone else knock it down and replace it with a 3 story monstrosity with 10' wide windows and 5 garage doors.
I see some oddball plans come through at work but we avoid the TO area like the plague. |
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09-07-2022, 03:26 PM | #369 |
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Yeah you get a real mix in this area, some are classy and not too big, others are huge. I was thinking a pre-fab home, a nicer one for a prefab but a prefab, try to keep it under $750K anyways. It's a BIG lot for that money just 10 mines from downtown but it's gone.
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09-07-2022, 03:39 PM | #370 | |
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The real problem is the low to low-middle class who are actually affected by many of the rate increases making it increasingly unaffordable to buy. I am in the Real Estate industry, myself and many of my clients are still making cash purchases to continue to prop up our real estate portfolios. I don't believe there is anything more than a correction, and maybe a larger shift in some markets like Boise, ID which was sharply overvalued due to only pandemic factors & demand there will dry up until rates rise again. Luckily, my Chicagoland market (aside from Loop condo sales) has been relatively insulated so far from alot of these market pressures, even though I am starting to see a bit of a uptick in market time & price decreases. Once rates stabilize a bit somewhere in the mid to high 4's I think we will see another up turn in the Real Estate market again either next Spring, or we will be in a "recession" type period until 2024. Still far too much demand that was only deflated due to rates, and builders still behind many, many years on new construction let alone more "affordable" homes. |
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09-08-2022, 06:58 AM | #371 | |
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Bought my home at 5.75% in 2005 and that was just before the market peak. |
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09-08-2022, 07:08 AM | #372 | |
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What's different from 2008 is that while underwriting is better, we've not been in a secular increase of interest rates like this in decades. People have become accustomed to cheap money and it's hard to say how this change is going to impact the market overall. The market eventually reverts back to the mean, and if you use this graph as a guide, the last few years' growth has a way to go back down. Last edited by tgrundke; 09-08-2022 at 07:14 AM.. |
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09-08-2022, 07:12 AM | #373 |
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I'm the pessimist here: I think we're going to see 8% mortgages by the end of Q1 2023.
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09-09-2022, 12:36 AM | #374 | |
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Ultimately though, regardless of if there is or isn't a correction in the near future -- the upward trend on your graph is very clear. If prices do come down, then buy as much as you can! |
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