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'Fannie and Freddie Were Lenders': U.S. Real Estate Bubble Nears Its End
Executive Intelligence Review. ^
| 6/21/02
| Richard Freeman
Posted on 07/15/2002 9:25:42 AM PDT by AdamSelene235
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To: AdamSelene235
bump
To: Phantom Lord
Yeah, ya get more home, but ya don't get a job. Great for the retired, though.
To: Dec31,1999
California is not the only state that has jobs. Geez.
I left NY and a job to move to another state, and guess what, I quickly found a job paying me MORE.
To: AdamSelene235
Oh there is unquestionably a housing bubble going on, its already burst in the worst areas, like SF Bay area... when houses were going up 40% a year, there was no way it could sustain... and since 2001 they started falling at rates of 20-30% a year... still they are overpriced, but falling back to earth.
However as bad as these bubbles are, and they are rediculous, there are many areas where real estate is not insane.. and most of the country falls into this. 5% or less a year increase... and in some areas no growth or decrease. So if you live in the badly bubbled areas... have fun... you won't get your money out for decades if you bought at the high end. However the rest of the country is fine.
To: Phantom Lord
That's great! What State did you move to, and do you like it?
To: Dec31,1999
I moved to NC and have never regretted it for a single moment. I love it here, as does my wife, who also left NY and a job to move here. We were not married at the time either. It will take an act of God to get me to return to NY.
To: m1911
ping for your mortgage/refi search
To: Poohbah
The increase in double income households is a primary reason the housing market has continued to boom, as opposed to the drop it took in the late-80's and early-90's.
148
posted on
01/15/2003 12:23:01 PM PST
by
X-Servative
(Should I sell or should stay in CA)
To: monkeyshine
>All we have to do is lock in these rates, and hope we can keep our jobs and cash flow positive to pay the mortgage during the housing price decline.
There is one thing fueling this increase in housing prices. Working couples are devoting huge percentages of their income to feeding the home. Why do this? Because a mortgage has been called a form of enforced savings. People are foregoing investments because housing keep rising.
However if housing prices are flat or simply don't increase as much as alternative investments, then enforced savings becomes a money pit.
People won't simply hang on to an expensive house and hope to make the payments as you suggest, if they are falling behind and their retirement is threatened as a result.
The housing market is on a knife edge. It looks like a sure thing. But all that has to happen is for for the economy to pick up to any degree, and suddenly housing will look like a very bad deal.
To: Dialup Llama
I think it depends on where you are. If the economy picks up, housing in some areas may very well rise even further. You cannot remove the element of supply and demand from the equation.
To: Phantom Lord
Go to the bank and apply to purchase a home where the mortgage payment will be 50% of your gross income and see how quick your application is turned down.I don't know. There are a lot of no-income verification loans being made almost solely on the basis of credit scores (at a slightly higher interest rate). I suspect many of these loans push 50 percent of gross true income or worse.
To: Petronski
By the way, you wouldn't happen to work in the precious metals industry, would you? No, but since your post here in 2002 gold has gone up 260%.
Oh, and Fannie has dropped 62% in dollar terms. Far far more in terms of hard assets.
152
posted on
11/23/2007 10:09:57 AM PST
by
AdamSelene235
(Truth has become so rare and precious she is always attended to by a bodyguard of lies.)
To: AdamSelene235
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