Weve had about a 5% total return since Biden took office and we are coming up in 3 years.
Manhattan said:
21.7% since the day after the election… and the market is down big in the last 45 days because JPow refuses to give up until we have a recession.
Manhattan said:
21.7% since the day after the election… and the market is down big in the last 45 days because JPow refuses to give up until we have a recession.
Nanomachines son said:zoneag said:Nanomachines son said:techno-ag said:I think it's more modern expectations that are out of whack. A young grad expects $100,000 job on day one. Wants a 5 bedroom $750,000 house with 0 down at 3%.Definitely Not A Cop said:hph6203 said:You have to save 2.5x as long to purchase a home that costs 3x as much monthly. Interest rates are a portion of the equation, but they matter WAY less than price relative to income. Even at 0% interest rates it's more expensive/difficult to buy a home than it was in the early 80's.techno-ag said:
What did we ever do back when the interest rates were near 18%?
Oh yeah, I remember. We saved up for 20% down, didn't buy more than we could afford, and refinanced when rates went down.
1980
Median House Price: 47,200
Median Household Income: 21,000
20% Down: 9,440
Interest Rate: 17%
Tax: 864/yr (72.00/mo)
HOI: 250/yr (20.80/mo)
P&I: 539.00
Total Payment: 631.80
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
2023
Median House Price: 416,000
Median Household Income: 81,500
20% Down: 83,200
Interest Rate: 7.5%
Tax: 7615 (634.59/mo)
Insurance: 2204 (183.67/mo)
P&I: 2327.00
Total Payment: 3145.26
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Thanks. Some people's inability to admit that economics were more favorable to them in the past is strange. And that's not to absolve the idiocy towards our current economic policies that this generation is perpetuating. I'm sure the millenials will be gaslighting the 30 year olds the same way in 30 years.
Examples only of course, but you get the point.
You could buy a house back then in a relatively safe area for cheap. Thanks to mass immigration and enormously different demographics, the cheap areas are all crime ridden hellholes. If you want your kids to not get shot at or beaten up daily in school, you're going to have to pay out the ass nowadays.
The situation is nothing at all like it uses to be. People are bankrupting themselves to get away from bad areas of town. They have no choice if they have a family.
Glad someone finally said this. In the midwestern city where I live, former working class neighborhoods with modest starter homes are now crime ridden dumps thanks to runaway third world immigration. The schools are terrible and unsafe. Even in this low cost of living city you need to make well above the median income just to have a chance to buy a home in a decent area with good schools. I'm GenX and am well positioned, but I feel for the young families today because these problems are only going to get worse.
It is incredible to me that people aren't recognizing that 50 years ago, these neighborhoods were all white because the US was literally 80 to 85% white. They were safe because the demographics guaranteed it.
Diversity has obliterated this and now virtually any cheap area is a ghetto in any city. Yeah you could find a starter home in a ****hole neighborhood but your house will get broken into daily and your cars stolen as well as your kids beat up or shot at constantly. Wow what a deal you're getting!
Your choices now are either pay rent or get fleeced in a good neighborhood. There are no other options because starter homes are all in unsafe areas.
Hard not to have higher earnings when your baseline is an unprecedented, global pandemic that shut down the world.Manhattan said:
Biden won and people knew companies would have higher earnings with Biden so they went up.
Economy is good so housing is absolutely maxed out.
Time to lower interest rates and get money moving again.
So now you are going to ignore the fact that globalism exists and that the rest of the world shutting down and reacting to this would have had no effect on the US even if we had just ignored it?Manhattan said:
Maybe the world should have had exceptional American leadership during the pandemic.
See my prior post.Manhattan said:
What did Biden make worse with the vax?
Biden's infrastructure bills are the reason we have economic growth and not stagflation…
carl spacklers hat said:4 years removed from college I made my first home purchase (was a townhouse, but you get the drift). I paid 20% down and signed a note for 8.5%. This was in 1997, and I was thrilled.tk111 said:
It's really terrible. I know a number of young couples just a few years removed from college that have been very successful and are still absolutely crushed at their prospects of getting a home due to the overwhelming double-whammy that is prices and interest rates.
What has changed between 1997 and 2023, besides increases in construction costs, insurance costs, taxes and massive interest rate manipulation by the Fed?
If Biden sh**s his pants, this Upper West Sider would talk about how it smells like roses.YouBet said:See my prior post.Manhattan said:
What did Biden make worse with the vax?
Biden's infrastructure bills are the reason we have economic growth and not stagflation…
The increase in the valuation of stocks and homes is due mostly to inflation brought on by massive government spending.Manhattan said:
21.7% since the day after the election… and the market is down big in the last 45 days because JPow refuses to give up until we have a recession.
Hoyt Ag said:
This is truth. I am one of those trying to sell a home but it wont be leaving the market anytime soon. I am probably going to be renting it out against my better judgement. Someone with 10% down on my house is still looking at a $4000/mo note.
fka ftc said:How about there be some honesty in what that average home bought you in 1980 vs 2023 and then there can be a discussion. Until then, it's a bunch of hooey as most millenials wouldn't let their cats live in what the average home was in 1980.Definitely Not A Cop said:
Thanks. Some people's inability to admit that economics were more favorable to them in the past is strange. And that's not to absolve the idiocy towards our current economic policies that this generation is perpetuating. I'm sure the millenials will be gaslighting the 30 year olds the same way in 30 years.
tk111 said:
It's really terrible. I know a number of young couples just a few years removed from college that have been very successful and are still absolutely crushed at their prospects of getting a home due to the overwhelming double-whammy that is prices and interest rates.
bmks270 said:Hoyt Ag said:
This is truth. I am one of those trying to sell a home but it wont be leaving the market anytime soon. I am probably going to be renting it out against my better judgement. Someone with 10% down on my house is still looking at a $4000/mo note.
Mortgages will be higher than rents, I'd imagine sales slow.
Ted Lasso said:
Except home prices were much closer to wages back then. Big difference.
Hoyt Ag said:
I disagree. Rent is crazy expensive right now in my area. I have 3 applications in to rent my house for 3200/mo. 5 bed 4200sqft. Finding an apartment is a pipe dream around here, and when you do it is $2000mo for a 1/1. House rentals are up due to low inventory overall. I thin kaverage income in our town is like $42K/yr, so a pretty low income area.
That's funny but is a valid retort.itsyourboypookie said:tk111 said:
It's really terrible. I know a number of young couples just a few years removed from college that have been very successful and are still absolutely crushed at their prospects of getting a home due to the overwhelming double-whammy that is prices and interest rates.
Sell them yours at a discount
"I can't afford homes in this market! You boomers had it good back then!"BoydCrowder13 said:Logos Stick said:Definitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment compared to income is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
Now do the amenities.
Heck the roof itself is 2.5x what it was back then for the same square foot home because of the massive pitch difference.
Put formica in. Put linoleum in instead of tile. Put those cheap ass windows in we had back then. Put in a non tiled walk in shower/bath instead of both. No fence versus a privacy wood fence. Etc
Amenities have improved but that is just home building practices across the board. There isn't a market for small houses with lesser amenities.Most have been bulldozed for McMansions at this point. When anything that style and in a lower price range goes on the market, cash buyers come in for 20% over asking to make it a rental. Which is understandable. I'd do the same thing. But there really aren't many options left for 1,500 sq foot houses without updates.
The problem is you, not the market.Quote:
There isn't a market for small houses with lesser amenities.
You like that? If you are so obsessed with me you should know I am mostly retired after putting in my hard work.Proposition Joe said:
I like how the guy with roughly 4000 posts a year, all anything but concise, is explaining how people don't work as hard as he does.
We both graduated around the same time. We had it easier.
That's not to say "no one can achieve success" now, but acting like the route to owning a home is similar for graduates the last 3-4 years as it was when we graduated is simply not based in reality.
Though there are trade-offs -- the opportunities to becoming extremely wealthy in a short amount of time are in much more abundance now than they were in 2000. But that contributes to the gap...
Proposition Joe said:
I like how the guy with roughly 4000 posts a year, all anything but concise, is explaining how people don't work as hard as he does.
We both graduated around the same time. We had it easier.
That's not to say "no one can achieve success" now, but acting like the route to owning a home is similar for graduates the last 3-4 years as it was when we graduated is simply not based in reality.
Though there are trade-offs -- the opportunities to becoming extremely wealthy in a short amount of time are in much more abundance now than they were in 2000. But that contributes to the gap...
Houses were 80ktechno-ag said:
What did we ever do back when the interest rates were near 18%?
Oh yeah, I remember. We saved up for 20% down, didn't buy more than we could afford, and refinanced when rates went down.
It is more difficult to buy the same house for the same price at the same rate as a decade ago. That should be and I believe is obvious to everyone.LMCane said:Proposition Joe said:
I like how the guy with roughly 4000 posts a year, all anything but concise, is explaining how people don't work as hard as he does.
We both graduated around the same time. We had it easier.
That's not to say "no one can achieve success" now, but acting like the route to owning a home is similar for graduates the last 3-4 years as it was when we graduated is simply not based in reality.
Though there are trade-offs -- the opportunities to becoming extremely wealthy in a short amount of time are in much more abundance now than they were in 2000. But that contributes to the gap...
I would think it is pretty self-evident that it is much more difficult to buy a home today with 7% mortgage rates and home prices at all time highs..
than it was a decade ago with 2.7% mortgages and lower house prices.
I don't see how that is logically arguable.