By bubble gone, you mean the height is gone, but not that it's bursted already, right? Because if you don't believe hyperinflation is coming, you MUST believe houses will depreciate, right?
I think houses will appreciate going forward due to attractive valuations and modest inflation.
Home purchases are, for the most part, a purchase with credit. As the cost of credit rises, less people will be able to borrow, it is as simply as that.
Even with rates at historic lows the housing market is sitting on the lows of the last 10 years. Just because something costs less than to replace, doesn't mean it is undervalued. It means there is excess supply.
When we hit hyperinflation, houses may go up or down in price, it matters how bad it is, but they will almost certainly approach their "cash value" price.
Yes, it doesn't mean it is undervalued, but it does mean that no one is going to make more of it until it goes back to the cost of replacement.
And no one should ever buy a house with credit. We have learned that when your name goes on the dotted line, the bank that pretends to loan you money; never puts forth one dime of consideration (which is mandatory in a real estate transaction) .... then they sell your signature over and over and over and over again. In many cases the 100,000. they pretended to loan you, was sold on the stock market several times before you even signed the document.
Pretend you write a blank check to someone... sign it.. You have hundreds of people photocopying it, and rather than cashing it... they are selling it.
You can't do that with a blank check ... photocopies don't play... but promissory notes/mortgages do according to the courts. Everyone look at the promissory note you signed when you purchased your home... and see how intentional it is that your signature on the last page does not correspond with the first pages. Page 1 might be a half of page... page 2 might be a full page... All they want is your signature, to something... and they will take whatever they can attach it to ... anytime past, present and future.
Citation needed on this whole post. I can't even keep up with what you're trying to say.
Isn't this the exact same thing the so called experts were saying right before the housing bubble burst?
Real Estate does have a long way to drop still because it was not allowed to bottom out in 2008.
I'd rather put my money into commodities like gold and silver and rent housing then to deal with owning a house through credit.
The real estate burst was deflationary, and real estate prices went down. The opposite, inflationary pressures, should bring rising prices. The logic follows, no?
If you're going to buy real estate for keeps, then you want the prices to be low. If the prices are low, then you have a better opportunity to rent. If the prices go up, then you can flip it. It really depends on what you are willing to do and the skills you have. Just buying a house and waiting for the market to go up to resell is a failing strategy. You should plan to make your money back within 2 years at the most, whether that means collecting the price of the house in rent or reselling it for double your total investment. Double is a lot to ask for higher priced homes, but for people who are just starting out, a 15k house with 5k investment can turn into a 40k house at resell value if you can find it for that cheap. They could be foreclosures or even just a private sale from someone who just wants to get rid of it. That's how we got our latest house. There was no advertising involved, and you can get a pretty good deal if you talk face to face with people without relying on the marketing facade.
Make your money back in two years at most? By renting? You should sell your secrets on a late night infomercial.
What you're describing is mostly work and not a whole lot of investment. I'd rather make 12% per year on any amount of money I can stuff into something than 50% per year on $20,000.
It sure has been one of the best. Out stripping most commodities I would figure.
Still I don't think the markets have finished collapsing. I think things will continue on a downward spiral until we regain control of the counterfeiting of our currency. That or we are allowed some currency competition.
I think there are many areas we are going to have to re-evaluate. I've heard of a couple in recent days. I've heard people say as long as the price of gold is this high the mining will continue. Same for oil. Big boom. ? The increases all seems strictly due to inflation. And proportional. I don't really see how twice as many of something worth half as much can really get you off of your butt to do something.
I've also noticed in many areas it seems impossible to get good quality. I bought some sewing needles today and never did find any that looked like something I would sew with. Two places later I found some that looked suitable to pull splinters. I also glommed onto some great old music books that they don't print any more. They have new editions but these had ring binding that lays flat on your music stand.
I suppose there are lots of quality items out there that have increased in value and could be a real hidden investment.
What?
While real estate is the topic. What do y'all think of *land trusts*?
I keep reading about people (mostly rich folks) putting their real estate assets in trusts - with themselves as the beneficiary. Theory here being that instead of the property being in a person's name, it's in a trust's name, hiding who actually owns the property.
I'm also seeing articles on scammers using the same tactics as actual land trusts to dupe people into signing their property over to a trust.
Seriously way too complicated of an issue to just start explaining here, but one of the benefits is anonymity.
Real estate values don't go up in an inflationary environment - they go down. Cost's to maintain go up. When values get near a real bottom then renters will jump ship and rental properties won't look so attractive due to lower occupancy ratings.
Well, we've had an inflationary environment for well over a century and home prices have gone up. What's the deal there?
Wouldn't the type of real estate matter? If food costs go up, then won't the price of farm land have to somewhat keep pace with that?
Terrible wager at the present time. Farmland is stupid expensive, and it's more of a bet on biofuel policies than it is a bet on inflation.
Anything tied to massive credit, mortgage and the banking industry is a TERRIBLE investment right now. As the derivatives stuffed full of toxic mortgages unravel you will see the bankers continue to print and hand themselves more and more unsecured 0% loans in a futile attempt to bail themselves out of the collapsing derivatives market. Real estate has NEVER been more over valued than it currently is in this country right now. These massively overvalued derivatives packages are to the financial market what a badly leaking nuclear reactor is to a city.
They have NOT stabilized these industries. They have simply stuck their finger in the dam then done nothing more because it would wipe out all the Big 5 banks. All the QE is to simply payoff the wealthiest investors who have been duped into these derivatives but are now aware. This QE is the only thing keeping JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs etc out of high profile World Court lawsuits and felony prosecutions that would bring the whole thing down in flames.
Even a 5% negative variance in the value of $100 trillion derivatives will wipe out the industry and the industry is believed to be closer to 35% because of all the corruption. Fixing even a small percentage of the derivatives problem is mathematically impossible. It has to collapse and it will take decades or even generations for the banking, mortgage and real estate market to stabilize again.
These a**holes completely screwed the real estate and lending industry for generations. The federal government did and still is just watching it all while giving the crooks an occasional "yes boss". In 2008 we were only made aware of the problem. We did NOT fix it. We are kicking a can the size of Los Angeles down the road right now.
[citation needed]
NAR's composite quarterly Housing Affordability Index* rose to a record high of 205.9 in first quarter, based on the relationship between median home price, median family income and average mortgage interest rate. The higher the index, the greater the household purchasing power. This is the first time the quarterly index broke the 200 mark; recordkeeping began in 1970.
You can also look to the Housing Opportunity Index for more data.