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Housing market

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https://sigforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/320601935/m/3630053684

October 30, 2021, 08:33 PM
Hammer1967
Housing market
We are living in OZ

I went to an auction today. A small two bedroom house in town and it need a TON of work, about 30k worth. And that’s what I could see.
Everything I could see needed work, about 1100 sq ft.

It sold for $180,000 plus 10% for the auction company.

How much longer can this continue?


__________________________

If Jesus would have had a gun he would be alive today. Homer Simpson
“Him plenty dead” Tonto
October 30, 2021, 08:39 PM
1s1k
quote:
Originally posted by Hammer1967:
We are living in OZ

I went to an auction today. A small two bedroom house in town and it need a TON of work, about 30k worth. And that’s what I could see.
Everything I could see needed work, about 1100 sq ft.

It sold for $180,000 plus 10% for the auction company.

How much longer can this continue?
A long time considering there is a housing shortage.
October 30, 2021, 08:41 PM
RogueJSK
quote:
Originally posted by Hammer1967:
A small two bedroom house in town and it need a TON of work, about 30k worth. And that’s what I could see.


It's simple... All you gotta do is lay down some cheap laminate flooring after watching Youtube for a couple minutes to figure out how to install it, knock out a few walls to make it "open concept" (wait those weren't loadbearing were they?), plant some flowers for curb appeal, install some stainless appliances, and slap a coat of light gray paint over everything. Then flip it for $400k. Just like on TV. Easy-peasy.
October 30, 2021, 09:00 PM
mikeyspizza
What I don't get is where are all the buyers/bidders coming from? How is there suddenly a housing shortage? Is it because of the low interest rates? Existing owners selling to take advantage of high selling prices, then rebuy at super low interest rates? Once interest rates rise, those with adjustable rate mortgages are gonna be hurting.
October 30, 2021, 09:10 PM
BBMW
You think you're being sarcastic, but...

quote:
Originally posted by RogueJSK:
quote:
Originally posted by Hammer1967:
A small two bedroom house in town and it need a TON of work, about 30k worth. And that’s what I could see.


It's simple... All you gotta do is lay down some cheap laminate flooring after watching Youtube for a couple minutes to figure out how to install it, knock out a few walls to make it "open concept" (wait those weren't loadbearing were they?), plant some flowers for curb appeal, install some stainless appliances, and slap a coat of light gray paint over everything. Then flip it for $400k. Just like on TV. Easy-peasy.

October 30, 2021, 09:11 PM
RogueJSK
quote:
Originally posted by mikeyspizza:
Once interest rates rise, those with adjustable rate mortgages are gonna be hurting.


Nobody with more than 2 brain cells to rub together is doing an ARM right now. Taking out an ARM is basically gambling that interest rates are going to go down in the future. But we're at the lowest interest rates in US history. There's literally nowhere for them to go but up. So zero upside to going with an ARM.

In fact, lenders may not even be offering ARMs at the moment. ARMs' selling point is that they usually offer a lower interest rate than the current fixed rates (during the initial period). But fixed rates are so ridiculously low that I don't think lenders have enough room to undercut their own fixed rates with even better ARM rates.

quote:
Originally posted by BBMW:
You think you're being sarcastic, but...


Oh, no. I'm fully aware of how most flips are done... As cheaply as possible, and mostly cosmetic.

Under the shiny candy coating, turds lurk.
October 30, 2021, 09:35 PM
P250UA5
Based on the listing prices, the 2 houses near me, both under contract, indicate that we've appreciated 40-60% since we moved here in 2017.

Both went under contract almost as soon as the sign hit the yard.

2 others recently sold, not sure the days on the market.




The Enemy's gate is down.
October 30, 2021, 10:24 PM
ACTEG
How much of this shortage is "real" demand, as in families buying houses? How much of it is Zillow, open door, and countless PE firms buying up property? Considering the median income in my area, I don't know how most people afford their houses. I'm glad I bought my house years ago when prices were dirt cheap.
October 31, 2021, 07:10 AM
Hay2bale
Zillow has stopped buying houses, at least temporarily.

https://www.usatoday.com/story...e-flippers/49278797/


----------------------------------------------------
Dances with Crabgrass
October 31, 2021, 08:03 AM
ridewv
quote:
Originally posted by Hammer1967:


It sold for $180,000 plus 10% for the auction company.

How much longer can this continue?


Until interest rises, bring back 8% mortgage and 12% auto loans and our "shortages" will disappear.


No car is as much fun to drive, as any motorcycle is to ride.
October 31, 2021, 08:17 AM
Voshterkoff
180k won’t get you a single wide on a lot here, sounds cheap to me.
October 31, 2021, 08:22 AM
Mars_Attacks
Where is the money coming from to buy these houses?

Houses START at $500,000 in my area and there's no shortage of buyers.

People couldn't have made THAT much money betting in the stock market on crypto without huge capital gains penalties.


____________________________

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Here, poke at it with this stick.
October 31, 2021, 09:01 AM
LoboGunLeather
30%-plus increase in residential real estate prices here over the past 3 years, close to 50% over the past 5 years. People are still lining up to participate in bidding wars on new listings, and it is not unusual for homes to sell in just hours for 10% to 20% over asking price.

The driving factor seems to be low mortgage interest rates. A $250K mortgage at 2% APR will have first year interest costs of about $5K. Same $250K deal at 8% APR and first year interest would be about $20K.

Historically low interest rates mean greatly reduced cost to the borrowers, allowing buyers to qualify for much higher loans within the same monthly payment amounts. Competitive bidding results in rapidly increasing home values.

One of the down-sides is already taking place. Property tax assessments are based upon market value of the property, so taxes are rising just as rapidly as home values. This affects not only the home buyers but also renters, as landlords must increase rents to offset the increasing costs of owning rental properties. Also, retirees on fixed incomes are seeing their costs constantly increasing and taking larger portions of their budgets.

Homeowners insurance is also priced to reflect property values, typically the replacement cost to rebuild the home.

We have no mortgage. The property taxes on our home now are higher than our house payments on the first home we purchased 50 years ago. Homeowners insurance is nearly as expensive as our house payments were back in the day. Adding the two together, the ongoing costs of owning our home now are nearly double what we paid in monthly payments back then.

Still have to have a place to live, so we will stay right here for the foreseeable future. Maybe the tipping point won't arrive in my lifetime.


Retired holster maker.
Retired police chief.
Formerly Sergeant, US Army Airborne Infantry, Pathfinders
October 31, 2021, 09:07 AM
Graniteguy
We had 2 homes sell in my rural town this month. Both were purchased by out-of-staters (MA and CT).

Both of these homes are not being occupied by the buyers but instead rented.

This is what is happening.
October 31, 2021, 09:08 AM
RogueJSK
quote:
Originally posted by Mars_Attacks:
Where is the money coming from to buy these houses?

Houses START at $500,000 in my area and there's no shortage of buyers.

People couldn't have made THAT much money betting in the stock market on crypto without huge capital gains penalties.


Around here, a large number of new homebuyers are people moving in from other areas.

Cost of living, including housing costs, are lower here than in most of the rest of the country.

So you end up with a buyer who just sold their tiny 1 bedroom house on either coast for $1 million, then moves here and can easily afford to bid $300k on a $200k 3 bedroom house, and they still see it as a bargain (and are still pocketing $700k in profit).


For example, I know a former Sheriff's Deputy from California who retired about a decade ago, sold his little house in CA for over $1 million, moved to Arkansas, bought a really nice house here for $300k, plus a boat, sports car, and an RV, and still pocketed almost a half million in profit.

Or, I know another guy who moved from California about 4 years ago, and used the money from selling his CA house to buy himself a nice house to live in here plus a half dozen cheaper rental houses around the area.
October 31, 2021, 12:02 PM
BBMW
For the last several years, when anyone asks why anything has gone up in price, this is my standard answer:



quote:
Originally posted by Mars_Attacks:
Where is the money coming from to buy these houses?

Houses START at $500,000 in my area and there's no shortage of buyers.

People couldn't have made THAT much money betting in the stock market on crypto without huge capital gains penalties.

October 31, 2021, 12:12 PM
neverfollow
Live south of Charlotte. Bought our house in a typical planned community for $505,000 in 2019. House across the street, same house, no screened porch (we have one), just sold for $729,000, listed at $675,000. We could sell ours for north of $735,000, but where do we go next - it is ridiculous what is happening to housing prices.
October 31, 2021, 12:30 PM
Ozarkwoods
quote:
Originally posted by RogueJSK:
quote:
Originally posted by Hammer1967:
A small two bedroom house in town and it need a TON of work, about 30k worth. And that’s what I could see.


It's simple... All you gotta do is lay down some cheap laminate flooring after watching Youtube for a couple minutes to figure out how to install it, knock out a few walls to make it "open concept" (wait those weren't loadbearing were they?), plant some flowers for curb appeal, install some stainless appliances, and slap a coat of light gray paint over everything. Then flip it for $400k. Just like on TV. Easy-peasy.


Oh you forgot subway tile back splash in the kitchen Big Grin


ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ
October 31, 2021, 12:48 PM
ElToro
I just sold my Bay Area house in June for a few dollars under 1mm and moved to the FL panhandle and have enough left over that I could pay my house off here. But the payment is 1/2 what I was paying and I brought my job & salary with me. I’m actively shopping for multi family homes but there are no good properties available. Maybe I’ll buy a SFR to rent for 20 years then when I’m much older and tired of the acreage maintenance I’ll downsize to a house a renter paid off for me.

I do mortgages for a bank that caters to the 1%. You’d be really shocked at what a regular pair of folks who are mid career at tech companies bring home in salary and stock RSU. And maybe 1 goes to a pre IPO company and bets on the come they will hit the big home run. Buying A 2-3mm house and a 1mm mortgage is pretty much commonplace. A lot do 30 fixed but even more do a 7-10 year interest only loan and invest the rest. The thought process is borrow at mid 2% and either sell or pay off in full in 7-10 years. I have this conversation at least weekly with clients. And the kids these days. Nobody keeps cash in checking or savings past maybe 1 month it’s all in stocks/crypto. It’s only going up you know…. Big unforeseen expense? They call me for a HELOC or charge it. Many tech companies vest their RSU grants monthly of quarterly after the first anniversary vesting. So if you have maybe several $k of stock coming due that you can sell monthly why do you worry ?
October 31, 2021, 04:07 PM
Edmond
Buying a house is ridiculous now and that has trickled down to renting. Rentals are ridiculously expensive too.


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