• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

YAHT: Yet another house thread

TheSiege

Diamond Member
what does this article imply?
Text

does this mean that housing costs are going to decline or that rates are? or both?
im looking to buy sometime after the first of the year and im not too savy on the housing market.

should i wait or not or what?
 
if you're in the market, I'd just use it as an excuse to be more fickle about which house you want 🙂

Don't delay it needlessly though. Rent vs Equity.
 
Originally posted by: TheSiege
also, i dont pay rent. my monthly bills are about 150 bucks, and i work 2 full time jobs, 80 hours a week

must suck to have to work 80 hrs a week
 
Originally posted by: erub
Originally posted by: TheSiege
also, i dont pay rent. my monthly bills are about 150 bucks, and i work 2 full time jobs, 80 hours a week

must suck to have to work 80 hrs a week

yeah it does, big time. but i save a ton of money, and i might as well do it now while i have the time and energy
 
Originally posted by: TheSiege
what does this article imply?
Text

does this mean that housing costs are going to decline or that rates are? or both?
im looking to buy sometime after the first of the year and im not too savy on the housing market.

should i wait or not or what?

Housing costs tend to be sticky downward. There are lots of exceptions, but they tend to be in high volume, high demand markets (NY, LA, SF, etc...) which Provo definitely is not.

In general, if you buy now or in 6 months, I would expect the same result in Provo. You will be buying the house at a high price which probably won't go down very much, but probably won't go up very much either over the next few years.

As long as you keep the house for a long time, then you should be fine. If you may need to sell in the very near future, then you may want to think twice about buying (especially since you are living at home or with people who aren't charging rent).
 
The sky is not falling.

There arn't as many loans being written due to the current wave of new homeowners settling into their new home.

If anything, money is extremely cheap right now, get it while you can.
 
Back
Top