Posted on 02/27/2008 1:04:29 PM PST by slackattack19
If I read one more article on the depressed housing market I'm going to overdose on Zoloft in an abandoned builders model home and wait for the repo guys to find me and call 911. Enough of the housing market news already. There's lots more going on than meets the eye here. Some huge dangers but some equally huge opportunities. Here's what I mean:
1. THERE ARE TOO MANY HOUSES FOR SALE- No kidding. Really? Not so fast here. Except for some truly overbuilt markets we have about a 9-12 month supply of housing inventory versus the normal 6 months. It's the same situation that car dealers face in each new model year. About August the new models come out. The old ones are still on the lots. Too many cars and not enough space. Some get discounted. All eventually get sold...
(Excerpt) Read more at theuncommonsenseblog.com ...
LOL!! LOL!!! Where did this writer get his advanced degrees in real estate!!!
Buying the houses that Americans can't buy?
I throw a huge BS flag. Real Estate is STILL massively expensive. It needs to drop a minimum of another 25% to even get back to historical ranges. Europe and the ME are in their own soon to be popping RE bubbles. They ain't coming.
PS - what are historical norms?
1. 100 x monthly rent = cost of the house
2. 2.5-3.0 x yearly gross income = cost of the house
3. 40% (MAX) monthly take home pay should equal cost of monthly carrying costs of the house (PI, taxes, utilities, upkeep)
We are SO not there yet...
Nobody is buying, nobody is selling. Just sit and wait. Except those whose payments have increased for some unknown reason to more than their income. They’ll dump you out into the snow at 40 below on the marge of Lake Lebarge.
Oh, if only they had been given something to read before they signed the mortgage they could have avoided this... no, wait, they could have just read the mortgage before signing it. Sorry, not feeling much sympathy right now for people who got zero down interest only ARMs.
House inventory is the same situation as a car lot. I quit reading there.
What he really fails to mention, purposely, is that it is much harder to get a loan - even for qualified buyers. Also, with more inventory, less sales take place, and finding comparable sales for a real estate appraisal (if the property is financed) continue to dwindle. This all makes for appraising a home at a sales value more and more difficult.
http://www.rbauction.com/twincities/index.jsp
Attention Twin Cities
Absolute Auction!!
26 new homes for sale!
Good luck!
Used these when I bought, weirded out my search realtor.
Never have had trouble making a payment.
Your numbers are out of whack. If you suppose that a 3 BR house with 2 baths in a nicer area is going to rent for $1,400 per month with a yard and some parking that house is supposed to be worth only $140K? If you can get $17K per year in cash from the place and pay out only $8.5K in mortgage and interest, not to mention getting depreciation benefits that reduce your taxable profit to only $5K, with even a 3% appreciation rate per year it’s a killer investment with 20% down on the property.
My parents first home in 1954 cost $14k - it was a small 3 br 1 ba tract house, probably only about 900 sf. Formica counters, each room was small, bathroom was about as big as someone standing upright. I think their payment was about 68 a month on a 20 yr loan. Of course my father was only making about $2400 a year.
Tell me, what do we consider a typical starter homes today, and at what salary level ?
Today’s starter salaries are at least 10x or more what they were in 1954, so 10x the house cost is not necessarily unreasonable. Add in the oversized starter house at about 3x what it was in 1954 and there’s your answer.
Monthly Rental Amount $2,400.00
Percent of Year Unoccupied 5%
Annual Cash Flow (minus vacancy) of $27,360.00
Property Acquisition Cost $300,000.00
Less Down Payment - Cash In $60,000.00
Amount of the loan $240,000.00
Payment Monthly Principal/Interest $1,556.64
Annual Insurance Cost $1,200.00 (LOW BALL)
Annual Taxes $1,400.00 (LOW BALL)
Annual Repairs Budget $600.00 (LOW BALL)
Percent of Rent Mgmt Fee of 6%
These expenses total to Annual Cash Out of $23,521.28
Income of $27,360 minus cost of $23,521 = $3839 cash return over cash out
$3839 divided by cash investment of $60,000 = Rental Yield of 6.4%
This assumes some appreciation for the loss of the $60,000 down payment and that you have decent renters.
I’m in your camp, that SFH homes do not cashflow.
But I might add, you’re also forgetting the foregone interest on the $60K down payment at whatever interest rate you’d like to use...roughly another $2K a year even at today’s poor rates.
Rental housing is seldom profitable in itself. You can make money on it, but usually only in a rising real estate market.
I.e., let’s say you manage to break even for ten years, and then sell for double what you paid.
But that’s clearly not a good bet today.
I have to agree with some of his points. Look at how many homes there are in DFW under $150K just on Craigslist, for instance: http://dallas.craigslist.org/search/rfs?query=&minAsk=0&maxAsk=150000
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