Londo_Jowo
Lifer
In a 15 miles radius of where I live the housing market is booming, in the neighborhood where I and the 3 adjacent subdivisions at least 55 to 60 houses have been built this year.
Bay Area prices have gone up by about 20% from last year. Inventory is down by 50%.
Are you sure it costs more to build than to buy?
Housing prices can't fall much lower. Around here, houses are selling for less than production cost. I'm a general contractor and I can't build a house as cheap as I can buy one.
In my city, I've come across homes that go for over $500k but the house is in such disrepair, it would need to be gutted or it's better just to knock it down and build a new home on the land.
Real Estate is brutal in Bay Area. Inventory in San Francisco is extremely low, hence the double percentage jumps in prices. Also, many overseas buyers are here who overbid each other with cash offers.
Not that easy in cities like SF with attached homes and a myriad of regulations and approvals to go through. Only an earthquake can flush out all the old homes and ignite a "re-build boom".![]()
Who cares?
The only people who worry about this sort of thing are the ones who speculate in the market. People who are buying a home to live in it don't sit and agonize over whether the market is in a bubble or not. They buy a friggen house in move in.
Guessing at what 'might' happen is just that. Even some of the smartest investors in the country got beaten to a pulp in the last housing market crash. Sure, you can point to a couple anecdotal cases of investors doing well, but the investment market is a gamble, and the majority of people get burned. If they didn't, investing would be easy. It isn't.
So the OP is a shill, or clueless, but either way he's just a tool.
A lot of people who didn't care are now tens of thousands of dollars or more underwater in their house because they bought during a bubble. So, now they cannot move and won't have equity for many years. It's important and not just to investors.Who cares?
The only people who worry about this sort of thing are the ones who speculate in the market. People who are buying a home to live in it don't sit and agonize over whether the market is in a bubble or not. They buy a friggen house in move in.
Guessing at what 'might' happen is just that. Even some of the smartest investors in the country got beaten to a pulp in the last housing market crash. Sure, you can point to a couple anecdotal cases of investors doing well, but the investment market is a gamble, and the majority of people get burned. If they didn't, investing would be easy. It isn't.
So the OP is a shill, or clueless, but either way he's just a tool.
A lot of people who didn't care are now tens of thousands of dollars or more underwater in their house because they bought during a bubble. So, now they cannot move and won't have equity for many years. It's important and not just to investors.
http://ochousingnews.com/news/bernanke-pledges-to-do-what-he-can-to-reflate-the-housing-bubbleI see no real evidence of any housing bubble.
Nationwide, I'm seeing an average price increase of 3%. Yeah, in some places more, in others much less.
Lending requirements are currently steep, and too many unemployed to make any housing bubble IMO.
Fern
Back in September, Bernanke pledged to buy $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities each month for as long as it takes for housing to fully recover. With an unlimited pledge to provide stimulus, any concerns about a decline in prices was washed away.
Banks are not foreclosing houses from the last bubble because they'd lose too much money. Once we reach the last bubble's prices, we'll be in another bubble.Bernanke will continue to stimulate housing for the benefit of the member banks of the federal reserve until he is either removed from his post, or house prices reflate back to peak levels so lenders can finally foreclose on the squatters without losing money. I expect to see interest rates continue to fall, and house prices continue to go up. Bernanke will reflate the housing bubble, along with its commensurate problems, to solve the problems created by the last housing bubble. The last vestiges of a free market are quickly fading from memory. We are embarking on a new era of government-controlled housing.
Don't forget modified loans - 25% of which go back to default within 1 year. Banks have no incentives to foreclose on squatters right now so they are letting millions of people live for free. Banks are hoping that the prices will rise enough so they don't have to foreclose.The scoop is this:
- foreign investors with no investments in their home country invest here because of...
- QE3 buying $40billion or so monthly in MBS
- The foreign investors think they can't lose out
- Also there is money coming into housing to close the gap between renting and buying, especially with low interest mortgages.
-The 'recovery' affects only some local markets (the foreign investors just google the market they want to buy, basically) so one area can be at 2005 peak prices and a 4 hour drive puts you in a globally little-known neighborhood with crashed prices. Foreign investors aren't going to pull up middle of nowhere Smith mountain lake VA, they tend to buy properties around corporate HQ's and middle-upper class metropolitan areas.
The housing market is now horribly inefficient. Try applying for a non-FHA mortgage today and give me a call in 5-6 months when the paperwork goes through. Couple that inefficiency with a growing population and decreased rate of new home construction for the past five years and prices go up.
It is a factor because the rate of inventory generation (i.e. new home building) is artificially deflated due to difficulties funding the build. My in-laws are building a new home that costs less than 50% of one years' pay and have virtually perfect credit. It took them over 6 months to get the loan approved. This will cause inventory to stay low for a long time to come.Has nothing to do with loans. There are multiple offers on every house here in California. Inventory is at an all time low. That's the problem.
I dont understand why the gov would want to help increase prices back to 2008 levels. That was part of the problem. We need a real super crash bringing average priced home within buying distance of most americans.