Another article showing concern in the housing market- yet the author may have lacked critical thinking



seller.webp
 
Yup, real estate, like the stock market or any equity is not a short term investment. Been the same throughout history. Chances are the real estate is a far more safe investment because its "real" however can take a decade or two to show appreciation. Due to social media people think they have a "right" for their home to increase in value *LOL*

Nope, supply and demand and what the public can afford to pay.
 
Behind a wall?

When did the rates drop? If it's only been a month it'd be kinda hard for just that factor to light off sales, no? I mean, people don't just decide to move, find & buy a house inside of a week. At least not typically.
Some analyst predict mortgage rates rising next week.

All I can tell you is good homes go under contract 48 hours after listing. The only slowdown in single family home sales are homes with issues that are asking the same price as a home without the issues.
 
Behind a wall?

When did the rates drop? If it's only been a month it'd be kinda hard for just that factor to light off sales, no? I mean, people don't just decide to move, find & buy a house inside of a week. At least not typically.
They have dropped about 1% since July and 2% since spring. Probably almost as low as there going to get at this point.
 
I think it’s too soon to know based on one month and that month is following July which had a 10% gain in new home sales and the first gain in resales in a couple months.
However, if August holds true to the final end of this year, it will help lower prices, but I wouldn’t hold my breath

https://kpmg.com/us/en/articles/2024/july-2024-new-home-sales.html

New home mortgage applications increased for the month of August

https://www.mba.org/news-and-resear...e-mortgage-applications-increased-4.4-percent
 
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I think it’s too soon to know based on one month and that month is following July which had a 10% gain in new home sales and the first gain in resales in a couple months.
However, if August holds true to the final end of this year, it will help lower prices, but I wouldn’t hold my breath

https://kpmg.com/us/en/articles/2024/july-2024-new-home-sales.html
Yesterday I read an article that stated the price difference between a new and pre existing home has never been slimmer. Article implied new homes may be a significantly better value that a pre existing home with the spread so thin.
 
Yesterday I read an article that stated the price difference between a new and pre existing home has never been slimmer. Article implied new homes may be a significantly better value that a pre existing home with the spread so thin.
I have to tell you I can’t agree more. Coming from Long Island you were forced to buy homes 40 to 60 years old because of no new construction.
Since moving south, I wouldn’t even consider a resale anymore. In fact, we sold our 16-year-old house before anything broke down and needed replacing and just purchased a new one, which you know and now I know I’m good until a ripe old age as far as having work done on the house.

What I’m saying is some places of this country there’s so much land and so much building. It’s wise to look at new home sales and of course, recently built homes if a resale.
All things considered if given two options, the new home is a better deal in this area for sure
 
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Ah, I was thinking of the cut that the Fed just did (yesterday?) and that somehow impacting the mortgage rates. I'm not home shopping so I have no idea what the trends are in mortgage rates.
 
Ah, I was thinking of the cut that the Fed just did (yesterday?) and that somehow impacting the mortgage rates. I'm not home shopping so I have no idea what the trends are in mortgage rates.
I think your thought pattern is common - everyone thinking the fed controls the interest rates - but they only control the short end, the market controls the long end of the curve. Lots of people are going to be disappointed I think.

Here is the average 30 year fixed for the last year. Its just above 6%. You might see a dip to 5.5% over the next months depending on the economy, but if the market and the fed agree the terminal rate is 3.5%, that implies 6% on a 30 year fixed is going to be about average going forward.

1726868243283.webp
 
having just bought a home, i can say sellers are extremely difficult to work with right now. also, i got mortgage quotes from 5 different vendors and copied them on an email chain together. got me a rate that is unheard of currently. 4.62% for 30 years.
 
Any of them have basements?
Some do, many have crawlspaces. Some with basements are pumping water with a sump pump 24x7 in the spring. In NY my submersible well pump was at 375' or 400'. Here it's more like 50'.

I am new to a crawlspace. But it sure seems better than a slab. My first floor HVAC and well pump tanks are in crawlspace.
 
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