On the other hand, commercial real estate has their own problem, prime commercial space goes unleased, and majority of downtown cores are still empty, or heavily decreased occupancy.
I'm on the opinion of, if you need a house, buy a house - because you do need a place to live.
Yet, decreased supply, higher cost of loans and loan servicing seem to make it mirror 2006 - yet, mortgages are stronger than ever - but what about those covid mortgage forbearances?
What do all of you think?
Owning a home is a complex decision. No one can tell you without knowing more about your desired market, your career and life trajectory, your financial situation and your life goals.
One thing you should not do though is to let FOMO drive your decision making process. Old folks like me remember 2006 and how strong FOMO was at the time. It seemed like most folks were going to be permanently priced out of the market.
Right now looks nothing like 2006-08. There aren't a lot of ARM loans at risk and the risk from mortgage backed derivatives is much less. That said, we face an equally serious, if not more so(!!!) set of risks that could see the US GDP decline for a while. Generally, market corrections overshoot, and given the miscalculations of the Fed over the last few years I see no reason this time will be different.
I am personally looking to buy a home and start a family but I am waiting despite being able to finally afford (barely) a house in my desired market. I think the market I'm looking at will correct at least 10% in the next 6 months. I may still delay the purchase even then just because of poor financial conditions overall. I may be wrong. I think probabilities are in line with my view, however.
It's impossible to know what will happen. Even after 2008, when it was obvious that the market had to fall because there were >1 million underwater homes that banks were sitting on with the fed letting them pretend they were still worth the old price, it was still impossible to know exactly where prices would end up or how long it would take.
Personally, I tend to think that prices will drift downward slightly, moreso in places that are seeing big outmigration, but it's hard to say. If we keep seeing 10% inflation, then prices staying flat is actually the same thing as housing getting cheaper.
Make good decisions based on the information you can have. You will always know more tomorrow.
If you have the luxury of being able to live anywhere (e.g. 100% remote work, or no need for work), there are some exceptionally affordable places to rent housing until the market cools and it's a better time to buy. I don't think it makes sense to buy high unless you have very limited options.
I asked him what he meant, and he said, it always seems like a bad time, but you can't really ever time it perfectly. You get a house you can afford. Do the best you can, work your way up, fixing it up, selling it and moving to one that's a little better. Then you wake up 40 years from now and you'll be glad you did it.
That turned out to be true for me for sure, living in my dream home now, glad I dug deep and did it. It was tough going at first but, owning a home is still the little guy's best investment. It was true then and I think it still is.
People talk about supply shortages, but a) there seems to be a lot of building going on b) people will pass away c) housing density seems to be increasing d) people's wages haven't risen as quickly as house prices e) interest rates are heading upwards.
There will of course be new people coming of age and entering the market as well as immigration, but even so the price rises don't seem sustainable at all, and I imagine a lot of people will struggle to pay much higher interest rates with such high loan amounts...
This is all just an observers viewpoint - it'd be interesting to see people actually crunch some numbers on items such as I've listed above. I also believe there'll be large differences depending on location - even within the same country.
There are also changes in laws around housing- e.g. in NZ they're introducing laws to help increase density and reduce the perks for housing "investors".
There's definitely a lot going on.
1. The era of abnormally high interest rates of the early 80s. The greatly reduced demand for housing (and corresponding drop in housing prices) from 1980-1985 was not enough to offset 20% interest rates. Thus, mortgage payments were extremely high.
2. The housing bubble leading up to the 2007 crash. That time, high mortgage payments were due to abnormally high housing prices, not abnormally high interest rates.
3. The current housing bubble [*].
Whether now is the worst time to buy depends on whether rising interest rates will ultimately offset home prices. Home sales have fallen to April 2020 levels [1], but it’s too early to see a corresponding drop in prices. This may not happen for two major reasons IMO:
1. If interest rates rise to levels high enough that their effect on mortgage payments exceeds the corresponding drop in housing prices, à la the early 80s. I personally doubt this.
2. If the likely moderate increase in interest rates fails to cool the market at all. There may be enough cash buyers on the market (primarily institutional investors) that borrowing costs are irrelevant to housing prices. I find this plausible but unlikely.
[*] I am very confident that the housing bubble isn’t going anywhere without increasing total housing supply, which hasn’t met demand for the past 15 years, ever since new home construction stalled after the Great Recession (and never recovered). I doubt this will change anytime soon.
[0] https://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2017/10/another-look-...
[1] https://www.census.gov/construction/nrs/pdf/newressales.pdf
Just closed on a house in the Netherlands. I expect the prices to stagnate but not fall like they did in 2008. There is a limited supply, the demand is strong even at todays prices.
If conditions improve faster than expected, you can always quickly enter the housing search/market. Housing isn’t like most other markets that can move 20% in a day. You should be able to wait 6-12 months and closely follow the consensus on interest rates and housing market sentiment.
If you think their response will reign inflation in check, we'll probably see the market 'crash' and a recession like the late 80s.
If you think their response will be soft, and persistent inflation is the new norm, we'll probably see the market act more like the 70s.
Maybe they walk the line, but I don't see how that's possible. Monetary policy is just so of-the-mark right now.
Another screwball is WFH. That could sap demand for large cities and push demand in suburbs and smaller towns.
Someone in the comments there made a metaphor about "catching a falling knife." I respect this skepticism, and suspect I may have safely caught such a knife. More thoughts:
- If interest rates rise, the asset price bubble may deflate. This suggests the house's value on paper will fall — but unless the economy collapses, overall rents ought to be stable, and the cost of living on a typical property ought remain broadly similar. In the meantime, prices are still rising substantially in the area where I bought the house, notwithstanding recent headwinds in the mortgage market.
- I expect real rents to rise over the next few years, due to general supply-and-demand issues and the dearth of new construction. I expect this nationwide; I further expect them to rise in the city where I bought. This should mitigate the pressure on the value of my asset.
- I locked in a 4% interest rate. With a conforming loan of $647,200 that's something like $2200/mo in debt that's evaporating due to inflation. This is a substantial portion of the monthly payment. You will not get this good a deal, because rates are already going up. However, at current rates, you will still get free-money financing -- just not as much or for as long.
- I sold stocks to pay for my down payment. The stock market fell a good little bit since I sold. If your equity is still in equities you have already taken a hit that I avoided. (I got lucky, I guess; I also sold company stock at a very attractive price.) And note that even though stocks have fallen, they are by many measures still somewhat overpriced by historical standards, particularly if rising rates brings about a recession, which it might. If my real estate is at risk from rising rates and falling asset prices, it has lots of company. (Even a nice safe bank account is losing value daily.)
In conclusion, a lot depends on the specifics of where you're buying, how you're paying for it, and what you would do with the money instead. If you've got a wad of cash and wanted to make an all-cash offer, I'd preserve as much as you can against inflation, and save it for the recession in a year or two; you'll probably come out ahead.
Your personal financial situation matters a great deal in the decision. I took the plunge last year because I had about ~$300k sitting in cash for a downpayment and inflation news was making me nervous. You probably don't want to be holding onto a lot of cash in this environment as dollars lose value and nominal prices continue to rise. Taking out a big debt at a moderate fixed interest rate seems like a great idea in a high-inflation environment, assuming the payments are comfortable for you to make and you don't mind staying in the home for the long term. If inflation exceeds your interest rate, the house is getting cheaper for you to own (in real terms) over time.
If I hadn't bought a home I would've been strongly tempted to throw the money back into the market. But knowing I wanted to buy a home on a relatively short timescale this would've been a very poor decision, especially looking at how the market has performed since that time.
Home prices will also continue to rise over time. Not the at rate we saw over the last 1-2 years, but if someone is looking to buy today and decides to wait until prices come down, they will likely be kicking themselves in 5 years.
If rates go back down you can always refinance.
Given sales volume has dramatically slowed I personally wouldn’t engage in a transaction with a seller who thinks they have total leverage and force buyers to do things like waive inspection which many people do to win a house. It’s just not worth it.
Buying a house is a long term commitment, if you can't live there for seven years then it is probably wrong for you.
He was right about it being a bubble, but it still didn't crash for 7 years. It's all unpredictable but bubbles can last for way longer than you expect them to. Or they can burst at any minute.
If you do make the decision to buy, though, come in as low as possible, lower than you think the seller would take, lower than your agent thinks, and see what happens. The market is softening and you want to get as much value as possible.
The one thing that will remain true is that fixed rate mortgages are an incredibly good deal for the buyer. Your rate and payments can only go down, not up. Astonishing such a financial product exists.
If you can get approval for a loan the payments on which you can afford- with reasonable error bars for your 10 year income- and you can find a property in that budget you can stay in for 10 years- again, reasonable error bars around how the area and your life will change- do your diligence on the property, of course, but do the deal.
Good luck.
One thing you can always do, though, is ignore the opinions of an interested party. Realtors are the prime example. They will always tell you that "houses always go up, and this period we're living through -- that'll be just transitory. So buy now." Ignore them.
Another thing you can always do is ignore anything you read in the press. Those reporters just have space to fill, and they know nothing. If they do know anything, it's six months out of date.
If you're sure we're in a secular downturn for housing, like after the 2007 crash, then waiting a bit will be appropriate. Otherwise, just do what makes sense for own situation, and don't worry what "they" say.
But I think the residential housing market is due to correct.
The Federal reserve is indicating that they will continue with 0.50bp tightening at every meeting through the end of the year, and then on until inflation is under control. They're mentioning Volker and talking tough on inflation.
This is very different from the 0.25bp tightening and very measured "not too hot, not too cold" messaging from the Fed under Greenspan in 2003-2006 tightening cycle -- which still popped the housing bubble and led to the 2008 collapse.
They're going to crash the economy to get wages back under control. That means inverting the yield curve. That means CMBS probably pops and another financial crisis. The stock market is already having a massive anxiety attack about it. I can't see how residential real estate doesn't adjust.
And if the recent speculation that the only rescue for downtown commercial real estate in a remote-work world is condoizing into residential that means a flood of supply on the market.
Given rising rates it is definitely time to buckle up though.
The problem may be that at the best points to buy you may not be able to get a loan because you've lost your job.
Overall, I would buy right now if it really makes sense to you from a life perspective. I'd stay far away if your goals are speculative.
I feel very strongly that your house shouldn’t be considered an investment, and that ideally you should buy a house you enjoy enough that even if the price dips you’ll still feel good living there long enough to pay the mortgage. Bonus: for me having a good place to live pays off because it makes earning extra money far far easier. Long after I made enough money to retire I ran side hustles because did I mention insecure ;)
Also you probably know this, but it’s ALWAYS better to buy the worst house in the best neighborhood rather than the best house in the worst neighborhood. Much likelier to preserve most of its value in a downturn and to recover afterwards.
Do we think housing prices will crash? Probably not. There’s a housing shortage.
I never got a house till I had my second kid at age 40. I guess potentially I lost out on some appreciation, but I have never really considered a home an investment; I'd rather rent a cheap place and save more. I still don't like the hassle that comes with owning a place. But to each their own.
Another odd-ball thing nagging at me is just population age characteristics, but this is truly long term. The boomer generation really was larger than all of its following generations by large measure. I wonder whether this could make longer term US characteristics look like Japan the last several decades for this reason.
Do you need it?
The only two questions you should be asking yourself.
Housing can't be both.
Policies on taxation, lending, and subsidy can be used to push the balance one way or the other.
I'd place my bets on housing prices continuing to trend up and to the left, but (as a homeowner myself) I'd be pleasantly surprised if they didn't.
https://www.longtermtrends.net/home-price-median-annual-inco...
what??