You're doing well at least compared to Austin which running a little higher and crazy the past year. For the first time in my life I bought right before the bubble burst a year ago. One year and I could sell and make a ridiculous profit for one year. My house increased about 27%. The influx of companies, one right after the other, coming to Austin to escape Californiskan and Covid cutting off the construction supplies made prices SPIKE and BIG offers over asking a common thing. I also picked one of the I'm still pinching myself because I also picked by chance one of the fastest growing areas for families and those tired of drum circles and demonstrations. If had one here it would be another shut down somehow killing the Mexican restaurants which is impossible.
Especially when the Lane Train leaves the station for Baton Rouge in NovemberI would expect property values that close to Oxford to go to zero any day now. Sell, sell, sell.*
Everybody knows that real estate is going to continue to go up, for the exact reasons you state. There are more people in the country, and there's only so much land.How's that going to happen? Are a 100 million people going to die off? Even if interest rates get in the teens, people still need homes to live in.
If there's a crash, it's not going to revolve around real estate like in 2007. It's going to be a larger problem than that.
Such as . . . what?
Can you explain?
I spoke to a builder who has been building houses for over 40 years yesterday, he’s predicting a crash in the housing market in a few years that will make 2008 look like a picnic.
You bought a house overlooking Hippie Hollow, didn't you....
And here I sit in a paid for house, neighborhood going rental and all that implies, and no idea what to do next.
IDK… this guy is a cash money millionaire many times over. His reasoning for the crash coming is that many people are going to get stuck with homes that were overvalued when they financed that they can’t afford.I don’t think home builders are known for their skills in the field of national and global macroeconomic forecasting. Many builders who have been at it for 40 years know how to build houses and that’s about it. And many of them don’t even have that knowledge down pat.
FYI. If you want to know when I am looking at exiting the housing bull market? It's when 3D printed homes gain real traction. I first gained interest in these nearly 10 years ago. They will cut lots of cost and time out of construction.
Expect this to be a battleground over the next 10 years, but it will be a major disrupter and cut the cost of homes in half. Stick built homes will be a luxury item in the future. Only higher end neighborhoods will have them, with covenants of no printed houses of course.
https://www.kxan.com/news/local/austin/100-3-d-printed-homes-coming-to-austin-area-next-year/
If anyone knows how I can invest in this tech, please advise.**
It's out of control. Average here is $562,000.
The U.S. median sales price for a single-family home was 368,000 in the second quarter of 2016. It grew 30% to $485,000 by the same quarter in 2021.
https://kdvr.com/news/data/denver-metro-home-prices-could-reach-650k-by-end-of-2022/
IDK… this guy is a cash money millionaire many times over. His reasoning for the crash coming is that many people are going to get stuck with homes that were overvalued when they financed that they can’t afford.
And here I sit in a paid for house, neighborhood going rental and all that implies, and no idea what to do next.
FYI. If you want to know when I am looking at exiting the housing bull market? It's when 3D printed homes gain real traction. I first gained interest in these nearly 10 years ago. They will cut lots of cost and time out of construction.
Expect this to be a battleground over the next 10 years, but it will be a major disrupter and cut the cost of homes in half. Stick built homes will be a luxury item in the future. Only higher end neighborhoods will have them, with covenants of no printed houses of course.
https://www.kxan.com/news/local/austin/100-3-d-printed-homes-coming-to-austin-area-next-year/
If anyone knows how I can invest in this tech, please advise.**
Between current interest rates and borrower credit-worthiness to buy today, he's simply wrong. There's no real scenario in which a national housing crisis occurs that isn't a result of the national economic picture.
What exactly does this mean? Of course there are scenarios for a national housing meltdown. Some can be seen easily and some will be obvious in retrospect.
It’s a very unfortunate market imo. It’s basically eliminated first time/young home buyers from competing. That can’t be good long term for the market.
Everybody knows that real estate is going to continue to go up, for the exact reasons you state. There are more people in the country, and there's only so much land.
However, here's the deal. First, COVID has disrupted things, and that will correct gradually. We all know this, although hot-takers like the OP just like to get people riled up. Second, who are the people truly cashing out on California? Those are baby boomers, who are now taking their money elsewhere. And you mentioned something about people dying off, well, that is coming. Not to morbid, but boomers are old. That's a lot of inventory, and again, it may not happen fast.
The 'crash' per se is going to be in places where folks can't afford their mortgage. To me, that's where all these people are cashing out, which is California/New York/etc. Places like Austin/Nashville will see a drop, due to baby boomers dying, but not as pronounced. But who knows, it could all happen at one time.
Have you also noticed that there is huge pressure to buy right now? The marketing is insane. They know what they are doing. But during a bust, everyone is telling you not to do anything. Hmmmmmm.....
I've benefitted by whole life from Buy Low Sell High. So easy to say, so difficult to execute. Just like anything in life.
I bought my current house 2 years ago (DFW). My neighbor just sold his for 45% more per square foot than I paid for mine back in 2019.
It’s nuts out there.
What are the scenarios for a national housing meltdown that are not due to broader economic issues that can be seen easily?
Private equity money is rampant in markets driving up prices. Highly doubtful anyone has a full understanding of how this ends, but history is littered with disasters caused by financial giants entering markets looking for quick profits, with no intention of being long term players.
Even credit worthy borrowers won't be able to service their debt if inflation becomes an issue, which is looking more real. This may be what you mean by broader economic issues, but if it's easily seen it should be factored into lending standards and debt to income standards should be less. Obviously they aren't, otherwise the price increases wouldnt be feasible.
Saying there's no real scenario for a crisis sounds like famous last words.
I very much doubt a market in which buyers are routinely paying above asking price and driving up appraisals to false levels is going to end well for those with high debt loads, which is most Americans.
First. I fat fingered your upvote.
Second. I'm not a "hot taker" other than when I eat to much chorizo. Everything I am pointing out is backed up by data, facts, and expert forecasts by people like analysts at Goldman Sachs, Zillow, and Fannie Mae.
I think it depends on your definition of bad times. If you take any extra margin and invest it instead of paying your mortgage off early, you’d have more liquidity if you lost your job. A paid off house is well and good, but home equity doesn’t pay the bills if you lost your job. Now that statement obviously flies out the window if you use any excess margin to increase your lifestyle.
It's all based on age and ability to earn income for me. It's probably silly to pay of the house at 40 in a sub 3% interest rate environment. At 60 it's a different story.
The worst housing crisis in history took all of 5 years to completely recover from. It was preceded by 45 years of consistent appreciation.