Flynlow said:
It does seem to be going mildly pear-shaped lately (aka 2007-ish). I am relocating for work in the next year, and selling my current home next spring. I pay ~$1300/month for PITI (principle, interest, taxes, insurance). I cannot find anything to replace it with, and am slightly concerned...I only bought the house 4 years ago. Homes (and rents) seem overvalued to me. I will likely rent for a year or two and see what the market does. I might pay a short-term penalty in lost equity/rent, but the mobility and ease of changing my living situation and location have their own non-monetary value and are worth it for the short-term.
While there is the concern it will keep going up, the people that try to use that as a reason to jump in rashly seem to forget something: the market always corrects eventually. Home prices and rents can only go up so far, unless there is an increase in salary to go along with it. The median US household income is just under $60,000/year https://www.deptofnumbers.com/income/us/. Multiply that by .75 (taxes) and divide by 12, and most people have ~$3750/month to play with, not including important stuff like saving to their 401k, or you know...feeding themselves. And that has to cover everything: food, shelter, transportation, medical, entertainment, etc. Real estate can't go much over 50% of take-home pay for very long, or there is literally nothing left over. And even 50% of take home is usually considered unsustainable...stay at that level too long, and the torches and pitchforks come out (or government regulation, or massive shifts in behavior etc.). So something has to shift, it could take many forms:
- Home prices could drop, ala 2007-2009, to more affordable levels
- Incomes could increase, and home values are returned to an affordable level via inflation
- Corporations and REITs end up owning everything and squeezing us for every nickel, until the population revolts
Hopefully not the last one, but my point is, an imbalance in affordability for most of the population CAN'T continue long term. The pendulum might swing one way or the other for a few years, but it always goes back the other way.
You have most of it right.
Except 1 it’s not really a pendulum because there is only so much land( and less then you’d think when you factor in job access And desirability. But an ever increasing population willing, neh, eager to get on the inflation defeating elevator.
Except 2. 50% can be sustainable if your goal is to use real estate as your investment medium. I realize doing so violates two investment rules. 1 diversify. & 2. Have a escape plan.
The second isn’t relevant if you are committed to a particular location. If for family reasons, business reasons or just plain preference you decide to remain in one location you don’t have to be like most Americans who move every 5 years on average. There are solid fiscal reasons to remain committed to one location
As for diversify, while it is solid advice for most, it also imply’s that your alternate plans may not be as good. That if you make a selection mistake if you select enough alternatives maybe something will “luck-out”.
Sort of like by buying more lottery tickets you have a better chance of winning.
Oh, and as for waiting. Remember after two years any profit you made on selling is exposed to capital gains taxes. ( unless you want to take your one time exemption now instead of at retirement)