Because so many people overpaid for homes even while loan rates were low, I believe there will be a housing catastrophe because these people are in debt. If housing costs continue to drop and, for whatever reason, they can no longer afford the property and it goes into foreclosure, they have no equity since, even if they try to sell, they will not make any money. I believe that many individuals will experience this, especially given the impending mass layoffs and rapidly rising living expenses.
I advise you to invest in stocks to balance out your real estate, Even the worst recessions offer wonderful buying opportunities in the markets if you're cautious. Volatility can also result in excellent short-term buy and sell opportunities. This is not financial advice, but buy now because cash is definitely not king right now!
Soon, cheap homes won't be cheap anymore because prices today will look like dips tomorrow. I think inflation will cause panic until the Fed tightens its grip even more. You can't just pull the band-aid Off half way. Booms and busts are the ups and downs of the economy, and they will affect any investments. If you are at a crossroads or need honest advice on the best steps to take right now, it is best to get counsel from a financial expert.
@@jeffery_Automotive I need a guide so i can salvage my port-folio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can one reach this advisor?
I personally work with 'Julie Anne Hoover’’ she covers things like investing, insurance, making sure retirement is well funded, going over tax benefits, ways to have a volatility buffer for investment risk. many things like that. Just take a look at her full name on the internet. She is well known so it shouldn't be hard to find her.
@@jeffery_Automotive Thanks for this advice. Finding your financial advisor was easy after looking her name up. I found her website afterwards, left a message and hope she get back to me soon.
Maybe we’re crazy but after getting eight offers on our home, we refused to sell to the arrogant cash offer highest bidder and sold to the young couple who wanted a safe place to raise their family.
Good to hear there are people out there like you ❤ we are a family of 6, 4 kids... and we desperately need more space. We are living in 912 square foot right now and we are literally busting out of the seams 🤣 the market is so bad that when we do find something that would work for us and we can afford it there are always several offers and it quickly goes over what we can afford and we don't ever really have that chance. This gives me hope that our house right for us is out there . This is also how my friends recently got her house a few months ago. The older man chose her bc she had a family 👪
@Guinness718 It was good Ole covid time, so we didn't get to sit at the table and talk and sign. He gave a note to my realtor. I did not regret my decision, I was happy for them. They had been looking and saving and getting out bid. What's a couple thousand dollars in the scheme of things. I come from a long line of vets. Thank you for your service Guinness718
It’s amazing that you did that and I wish other sellers would stop these businesses from knocking people like my boyfriend and I (first time home buyers) out of the market. Unfortunately people just see $$$ and won’t do what you did.
I wouldn't go that far. Real estate values go up and down. It's cyclical but generally prices go up over decades. Work hard, save money and you will get your home. Mortgages are not as hard to get today as they were 10 years ago.
@@chrismckell5353 not completely true. Realtors work for sellers and buyers. When selling my house I can choose who I sell it to. The realtor will always try to get you to go for the most money but you don’t have to
That's the strategy... make it so hard to live that compassion for your neighbors is a fatal error. Divide and conquer, the most fundamental of strategies. And they're trying to divide by the maximum possible amount.
Not being able to buy a home has also meant that all the apartments are completely full up. You need dual income to afford a 1 bedroom apartment in the Pacific Northwest.
Yes, and now the pension funds are buying up the single family inventory to add to their portfolio of apartment properties. There is no where live unless you have a tent and a hardy disposition.
@@Revolution-tl5wo Its not the government. Its the businesses. You have to bring the businesses that are creating and driving these conditions to their knees.
I live in MD. Bought our house for $415k in 2017. Based off of neighborhood comps and sales within the past 12 months, our house would be put on the market at 570k and sell in a day. Unfortunately, can’t afford to buy, so what’s the point... 38% increase in 4 years. Something bad is about to happen
I tell you what, I am very happy to own a home right now. If I were to sell it, I would demand more than double it's last appraisal amount. I'm not selling it though because I know I will have an extremely difficult time finding another that would be suitable. My wife wants to sell and move but that's crazy right now. I feel for people who are taking new jobs and have to relocate.
My wife and I have no debt, work middle class jobs, save a lot, have parents that gift us money, and live in a low cost state with no kids. We are 26 and 25. We still cannot afford 20% down on anything livable. I can't imagine how people less privileged than us are doing. The American dream is dead.
Although 20% down is preferred, you can still get qualified for a loan with less. And if everything you said is true, you may want to check your expenses. It shouldn't be too hard to save in a low cost state...
Best part of veteran benefits is that you don’t have to put any money down and you don’t have to pay PMI when you don’t. I never would have been able to buy a house without the veteran benefits.
They should have let the banks bleed in 2008 and restructure.. They pain would have been great for a couple of years but we would have healed sooner... All that money printing needs to go somewhere.. And it obviously didn't go to wages
@@markduncan1149 It popped for you and millions of honest hard working folks like you. It didn't pop for the people that caused the crisis and continue to profit off of it. They were bailed out.
This is exponential poverty. We will soon have 2 class of people : landowners and renters. Jumping from one class to another will be nearly impossible.
Interest rates must be RAISED. Low rates deplete purchasing power. Working class folks use their money to mostly purchase things. They aren’t holding assets which get bid up via lower rates. They work for wages and pay for their lifestyle with those wages. The need to borrow anything imposes a burden but the real hustle is the belief that lower rates are helpful, when they are not. Lower rates are great when you’re the seller, but the RE market is driven by first time buyers. Those are folks who do not need to first sell in order to buy.
Only thing wrong about this report is that this bubble isn't going to pop. House prices will never go down again... the peasant population are about to slip back into permanent serfdom and if you don't own your own home you will be one of them.
@@dannyboy8474 Complete truth. There's simply nothing that will cause a fall in prices like everyone is secretly hoping for. We don't have deadbeats signing onto bad loans this time around. What will happen - these are assets, and the value of them will climb. And with the spending level that is coming out of Congress for this over-freaking-blown pandemic, expect inflation like the 1970's and early 1980's. Assets are a hedge against inflation, thus enhancing the wealth of these giants. In the end, none of you will be able to afford the houses unless wages magically go up for once for the middle class. Homeownership dreams are basically dead. Move to the country, that's about your only hope.
I was gonna say, this is really nothing. Krystal and all these enablers should see how far ivory tower logic can go to save an average citizen. Denial of free market capitalism didn’t go that well in the Bay Area
This is my plan. I’ll get my pension/retirement in 10 years. Im leaving the US. Headed to central or South America and living the rest of my days away from this. Don’t fall for the “work til you drop and own nothing” scheme. Good luck everyone, we gonna need it.
The really sick thing about all this is that if these huge businesses fail, they will be bailed out with taxpayers' money. The government should ban speculative purchases.
They've privatized the profits and socialized the losses. Genius, brought to you by the fraudulent legal concept called Corporate Citizenship and endorsed by all major politicians of both parties.
Don’t blame the investors. They’re only following your lead. The youngest generations have pretty much rejected traditions like marriage, raising kids, mortgages, and the sacrifices those entail. Employers, lenders, and other institutions can’t take you seriously because you don’t take them seriously. Live like arrested adults with no commitments and be glad that investors are building apartments for you.
I knew this rich guy he lived off the poor he will finance properties and when they missed a payment boom his lawyers will take over the property and he will do it again and again I believe a lot of people do that
No; we need to require homes be sold to individuals, not corporate entities. Any house foreclosed must be re-sold within a year or the government seizes it for use as public council housing like pre-Thatcher UK.
Oh thats so cute. The people who want the government shrunk to nothing also want a first-time homebuyers program. Oh and they blame the “woke” sjws for the absence of such a program. How precious.
It's not so simple, last time this was part of the reason of the 2008 crisis/collapse. Bush made it easier for those with less funds to buy houses and but those home owners didn't have stable income and.... boom. The number one priority I think would get rid of that student debt and make higher education mode accessible. (don't forget vocational) The better the jobs people have the better things will be. Education is the start of some kind of restore of the American Dream (which I doubt will come back, but maybe the widening gap can be stopped). Who wants to compete with low-wage countries on manufacturing or compete with a tsunami of automation ? Higher skill/education level is the only thing safe harbour. But it's hard to know which sector, etc.
Very true. I feel the need to be informed even though sometimes it makes me sad. But there's so much to learn and more information popping up everyday!
It's really frustrating to be in a position now to buy a home, but to see every 3 bedroom home either falling apart and overpriced or in good condition but over bidded for by well over 50k.
Bruh, same. We are lucky in that we do not HAVE to move. We are comfortable where we are but are looking to build wealth and personal growth with a home... but the market is bonkers and we might be better off waiting for the market to correct. However, for the public that will mean forbearance claims to finally be called and foreclosures to finally take effect. It's tough and sad, but it has to happen for regular buyers to have a place at the table again.
Just sold my home, moved back in with parents. Be patient and keep saving my plqn is to buy some trophy real estate when the bottom drops out. 6 months tops
I live with my grandma, I have a better chance inheriting the house when she dies than I do affording a house in the next 10-20 years. Waiting for my grandma to die, what a great system.
Pretty much everywhere in the world most people do not own a home. Americans got spoiled after WW2 because they were the only big economy left unscathed. Welcome to how the rest of the world lives you whiny losers.
@@ilovegoodsax That was a bit of a weird answer, so you guys do realize that it's nothing new here. Yeah, like this is how rich families pass on their wealth to their children and grandchildren.
You guys don't realize it's the government who allowed this to happen through bail outs and collusions with the same institutions your complaining about. The government is the problem. If they stayed out of the free market and allowed these institutions to go under and if they jailed those that committed fraud, we wouldn't be where we are at.
@@Achilles5937 Jonah, I agree with you, but there is a role for the government in this, specifically a government whose primary role is to protect the American people. What if google just started buying endless swaths of residential real estate? We are hitting a point where the people need to have protections from these corporate monsters that in some respects are just as powerful as nation states but with zero accountability to the people. I say that recognizing these political snakes are all bought-out with a few rare exceptions.
@@Achilles5937 You are correct. The market is an ecosystem and the government keeps using synthetic methods manipulate it. A free market won't be free of greed, but it will naturally correct itself.
I disagree that nobody saw the 2008 real estate burst coming. I saw it when I sold my house in 2004. I mean it was unprecedented that the value of my house doubled in 8 years. And the buyers of my house were given a loan of 105% of the purchase price. Then I read that people had taken out balloon mortgages. Then, I was offered a "no doc" loan to purchase a condo. I mean the red flags were HUGE.
I bought a small house in Orlando Florida (in 2001) for $105,000 @ 4.25% for 30 years......I had a feeling in 2006 something wasn't right because my house appraised at $265,000 .....So I went ahead and sold it at that time....... Then 2008 came around....... I purchased a Winnebago and have been travelling for (12) years and currently in Arizona ....... The same thing that happened in 2008 is happening now....even worse !
@Dwayne Peters The real estate bust was 1999. I was a foreclosure paralegal. Houses were over evaluated and banks were lending at 125% and balloon payments were a standard.Then the IT world imploded and all these loans went into foreclosure with people owing 100+% of their original mortgages. It was insane and it was really depressing to watch so many people lose their homes
@Eric Douglas Either interest rates go up crashing the markets to j Clyde the US government debt, or they print even more money that inflation starved you to death (not exaggerating )Get a professional advise or a broker you can leverage on his expertise.
@Eric Douglas They're a handful of them, however, names like Naomi Nicole Rhodes are exceptional. Just look up the name on the web and follow the prompts and contact her.
@@aigajenkinson2495 I SAW IT IN 2006 WHEN I SOLD MY CONDO IN FLORIDA JUST IN TIME. BUT I WAS TRAINED TO SEE IT,MY PROFESSOR IN 2000 EXPLAINED THE TECH BUBBLE TO US.
My friends and I have been talking about this since early summer last year. So many people fled NYC that rents are temporarily down, but property ownership is becoming even further consolidated, so we expect rents and home prices to increase significantly in a year.
@@crazycat1232 I mean by banks and management companies, like their piece discusses. In NYC management companies pool their resources and set up LLC upon LLC upon LLC so that you can't even figure out who owns the building you live in without lawyers.
@@crazycat1232 Exactly, it hurts renters and potential buyers, and the difference in how an independent building owner operates even if they are a landlord is incredibly different than what a building management owning 25+ apartment buildings does to its tenants. They break laws constantly, but are much more difficult to get any recourse from than if you know the couple of people who own your building. They can flagrantly violent tenant laws because they have so much money to defend themselves or tie you up in court. For example, my landlord where i've been living for 7.5 years owns a rent stabilized building and was charging me well over market value ($3500 a month) for an apartment registered with the city for $540!!!! I luckily figured this out and am now suing them for $600k.
Earlier this week, I offered 300k for a house listed that was listed for 225k that was bought 3 years ago for 160k with no renovations or changes and got outbid... very demoralizing.
The northeast is a wide swath of territory. If you are living in one of the affluent areas than yes but there are many more places that are not than are so you must be in an expensive area. I have lived all up and down the east coast and there are cheap places to live.
Imagine tryna rent with a moratorium nobody wants to take a chance so they are looking for 700 credit score and u to be able to pay 3x the rent just move in
We just purchased a home in new England for 70k. We put about 20k into it & the appraisal we just had came back at 140k. Now is a great time to buy in the NE, you just have to consider the area.
@@yeliab67 it's much different times then it was back then, corporations have no soul, they only care about money. The more housing they own the more they can set the prices, it's not going to drop when they own the majority and need to maintain their set profit margins, it's only going to go up.
@@2100suprafreak no it isn't. Back in the day people used to get married, buy a house and then start to have kids. Not have 3 and then try and figure out where to live.
That is because guys like George Carlin believe the American Dream is getting Rich and Famous. Most people will never be multi millionaires or household names. The real American Dream is being able to support your family and enjoy the fruits of your labor without Tyrants dictating to you what you can and can't do with your time and money.
@@sirensmelodyltd6118 you obviously don't know much about George Carlin, if you think that he thought the American dream was being rich and famous. You know what, not that long ago all you needed to have was a decent job and your wife could stay home and raise your family and you both would have a car and a beautiful house, not so anymore. And do we know why that is children?
With the crash of 2008 I lost my home to the bank. From that day on I decided to be my own Bank and all my savings have been in gold and silver out of the banking system for over a decade. Being financially independent is the best way of Freedom.
Investors are willing to PAY whatever they calculate an ASSET is worth. The only difference between Wall Street and Working Class is, The Working Class doesn't know what Capitalism is.
"young people to just pool our money together" Why CAN'T Joey, Monica, Chandler, Ross & Rachel pool their $ and send their Notary, Phoebe to purchase on behalf of "Friends LLC?"
What good will all of those homes do, sitting empty with no buyers? Every suburb, of every America city will eventually be abandoned and look like suburban Detroit.
@@2jz4me25 I bought my first home on my own at 23, 28 now and I'm going to sell before the summers end because there is a controlled pop of the bubble coming by design. Wake up. It's called learn the structures and games they play and play them to your own advantage. I did. Don't be a neck beard.
Thank goodness I live in a rural area. Low housing costs, low crime, clean air and water. Boring? Well.....you can keep your urban excitement. Peace and quiet are highly underrated.
Yeah I'm looking to move to a more rural area. I'm young and black, but I work from home now and I love the peace and quiet of open country. Plus, I just started getting obsessed with dirt bikes and so I would really like to be near open fields, trails, and dirt roads. I also stopped hunting when I moved to the city for school so I'd like to get back into that.
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered." - Thomas Jefferson, a founding father of the U.S.A.
@@lifesucksgetoverit5440 So true. I also believe the reason behind these ridiculous increases in appraisals on homes every year is so states can collect that much more in taxes.
@@lifesucksgetoverit5440 land speculators like George Washington (one of America's 5 richest presidents ever) decided that land should be a thing we pay for
I had multiple offers, some cash, some waiving inspections! I decided to sell to the under asking offer, a nice woman and her wife! I feel so proud of myself.
You should be proud. We have been looking in western United States Southern Ca for over a year and because we refuse to start our mortgage already upside down we can’t find a home as of right now. Totally tragic
Home inspector here... I’ve been screaming about this since the back half of last year! Not only are all of these houses selling for way above asking price, they are competing with an average of 15-20 other bidders so they have to waive inspection contingencies and buy “as is” ... the amount of costly defects I find every year is staggering.. and gets added on top of the excess cash spent to purchase the home THIS BUBBLE IS GOING TO HURT
@@AndrewDavid84 No body knows, this is different than 08. People that are buying are buying with cash, that means they have equity in the house. Keep an eye on when government forebearance will end, that will give you a window on when things might go south.
Except this is nothing like 2007/2008. Banks today have extreme strict lending standards (no NINJA loans) and these buyers today are high earning dual income households that have the cash/assets to purchase these homes.
I worked for the banks as an inspector during the financial crisis and I saw them come in and buy blocks and blocks of homes, artificially driving up pricing.
I work in real estate on the West Coast. I crunched numbers locally, and 46% of buyers in my market have been priced out of the market. Our market is fueled by remote workers, but will struggle when there are no more teachers, nurses, mechanics, and service people left to keep the city running.
I’m in the midst of this Greedy nightmare myself. No contingencies, negotiations, 20+ bids, if your lucky. All you’ve ever saved must go towards homes that most are NOT WORTH WHAT YOU’LL PAY FOR IT. If my newest bid doesn’t get accepted, my middle aged self will have to return to live with my elderly parent!!!!! Buying up every bit of beautiful lands is horrible too!
Trump "fixing" NAFTA, his dumb dumb trade war, and the prices of lumber tripling because of it, is the problem. They don't even address this fact in this clip. It's the reason people are cancelling new builds, and looking for preowned homes.
30 and annoyingly still looking. Every house I see with a sign that goes up is already sold before I even get a call back from the realtor. Shout out to my fam for dealing with me for more than the 3 months I told them I'd be home.
How long will it take you to save up $40,000? That's 20% down on a $200,000 place. Living at home, you should be able to sock away $10,000 a year, at least, if you work at it. And there are special deals for first-time home buyers and vets that get you in for less than 20%. You'll have to buy mortgage insurance if you're not a vet, but you can get into a place, if you work hard at it.
@@erikprestonTV Yup. My little sister did that, and then Dad willed her the house! I had to make my own way, and eventually cashed in some retirement to make my first home purchase. With the rapid appreciation on the property, it's turned out very well. $100,000 for the $60,000 I sacrificed.
SAME - went to college, paid of my loans, saving for a starthome - every time i look at the down payment I realize it will outpace my deposit faster than I can save it.
Hmmm, I am also a gen Xer. Saved enough money, during 2008, and bought a home. Worked full time and full time school, so I didn’t have student debt. Struggle is life.
I live in Houston (Harris County). I believe we are capped at 10% increase per year by law. You might want to look into if that applies to you and contest the rise.
@@andrewreisinger6860 Tax appraisal isn't market value. I've seen houses appraised at around $250k which were easily worth a million or two because they were giant mansions on sprawling estates. It's called corruption.
Yep, we looked for a couple months and ran into this day after day. Houses either disappeared almost immediately or they were asking way over what the house would appraise at. A lot of these same houses we would see later listed as rentals. It’s really sad.
@A M You'd better take another look. A mid one bed apt in portland, freeport, brunswick, etc. Is about $1,500 (and just like SoCA, they also have very high prices rentals) That is precisely the mid same in Los Angeles county. Moreover, Maine is exploiting middle class to subsidizes lower class housing. So you will see a lot of 1 bed apt for $6-900, but they are reserved for section 8ers. Property management firms control the property and inflate rent because Maine allows it.
@A M I suppose it is to those that aren't capable of achieving anything. If you're smart about where you spend your energy, you can definitely still build wealth and be successful. Why do you think otherwise?
@A M That felt explosive. We obviously don't live in a meritocracy and some have it better than others by design or by chance. I'm not aware of any other system where this isn't the case. Sounds like my interpretation of what the American dream is just different from yours. We're obviously on a sinking ship here competing against each other for scraps, just have to be more resourceful now than ever to build any kind of wealth
A house in the Oakland, Ca area just went for 1 million over asking price. I am in Charleston, SC houses are going for 30 to 40 thousand over asking with many cash offers in 1 to 2 days
Santa Rosa, CA resident here and my neighbor and good friend of 20+ years just sold her modest 1,640 sq. ft. track house for 800K, which was 50K over the asking price. She had 8 offers, 6 over listing price and 2 cash bids; several of the non-cash bids were higher than 800k. Our neighborhood has been evacuated several times over the last 4 years due to wild fires, too. And It's equally crazy that the home she bought in Portland, OR 14 months ago has already appreciated 85K according to the company she's refinancing with.
I live in a small town in Utah. A friend wanted to purchase a building lot in a subdivision nearby. He found all the lots were owned by a Chinese real estate investment company and they weren’t selling.
No wonder I'm being bombarded with callers and letters in the mail asking if I'd like to sell my home with zero fees or cost. In the past four years homes in my neighborhood have gone up 40%.
Every day. The house three door down is selling for $50,000 above what it was sold for two years ago and they are taking offers. 600 square feet no yard no off street parking....crazy.
This piece left a knot in my stomach. I feel like the vail has been lifted. My fiancé and I have been looking for a home when the pandemic started. The exact same thing happened to us with several houses we put offers in on. Cash buyers going 20-30k over asking. We found a home in late 2020 and still paid 5k over asking. We got lucky that our realtor knew the sellers realtor. If it hadn’t been for that connection we’d still be looking for a home. I figured the market was growing organically as Krystal pointed out, but never considered this is just another “position play” by the street. It’s sickening to think the value of my house is artificially increased by 15% and when the street gets tired of playing landlord cash in their chips. I’d imagine the time it will take my fiancé and I to recover that 15% will be met potentially when we are ready to sell the house in 15-20 years and hopefully we’ll break even by then.
I recently offered a piece of land I have for sale and had 50 offers in ONE day! And the price was just what I had in it, I was not looking for big profits. My home is 7 years old and I have ppl calling and knocking wanting to give me 50% more than what I paid for it. Crazy!! I went thru the bubble in 2008 and that property lost 50% of its value, not doing that again. I am happy to see you got something before it went totally insane!!
I got LUCKY buying mine. I happened to get into a good position where a friend of mine was selling her home and sold it to me exclusively. I also sold my condo and made a good chunk of change which helped a lot. Even with my perks it was a nightmare
Don’t stress too much, as long as you plan to live in the home for a while you will be fine. Your payment will not change if you used a fixed rate mortgage and ideally your incomes will grow over time so that you will be paying the mortgage with inflated dollars. In ten years you won’t want to sell because the payment will feel so low. Fluctuations in the market shouldn’t affect you in the near term and in the long term most real estate is not very volatile, you’re going to be fine :)
@@joeyp12788 The Great Reset is the name of the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF), held in June 2020. It brought together high-profile business and political leaders, convened by Charles, Prince of Wales and the WEF, with the theme of rebuilding society and the economy.
One thing Krystal said that bugged me even more was...when things go south, who are they going to bail out? Probably the greedy pension fund/hedge fund groups like before.
Far worse...the big institutions will be bailed out by pouring in yet more of our money, or what’s left of it, to revive the economy. And when that money is returned with interest, the Govt keeps that for itself. Talking about duping the junta
It's happening in Canada too. Counties won't let you build a small house because the tax bill is too small. There's no way into the market for regular people.
Personal home is a liability, not an investment. You are not getting any return on it. The concept you will gain equity years down the road is flawed logic. You will pay 3 times what you paid for it just in interest. Then then their is the thousands in property tax you will pay every year. Then there is the maintenance and up keep. Houses are only investments when you buy them to rent out to tenants. Then it becomes an investment.
@FrankFit not at all look up Robert Schiller’s research. Homes rarely beat inflation over the long term. I’m a professional investor and a bought my first home as a college student.
i bought housing for my children in the 1990's, thinking that housing was going to go through the roof. Instead prices gone through the stratosphere. Now their husbands are very nice to me.
Well said. I've given up on even hoping to buy a home. I'm almost 27. 30 years ago when my parents were my age, they bought a home almost exactly like the one at the beginning of this video, but about 50% bigger, in the suburbs of Nashville, TN for $11k (about $30k adjusted for inflation). That house sold a couple of years ago for $600,000. There are tons of places to rent here of all sizes. I had no trouble finding a small townhouse to rent. But unless the economy completely restarts, I'll never own a home. And it's not something that one needs to have a good life. But when you go to college, have a decent job in healthcare and don't live beyond your means, in the US you're supposed to be able to afford to own a home. But there is no American dream anymore.
you can buy a home, but i know you mean, a home in your desired town. why are people so against going somewhere else ? theres still plenty houses in the midwest. its a shame most of us have to give up on on places like CA/Seattle/NYC but you can still have your own home, just not in your favorite place.
Look into the rural areas of TN. I see homes in rural areas of most states for under 200k, even under 100k where you're not so close to your neighbor that you can see inside his windows. There are homes with plenty of land in the country in my state going for 80-100k.
Have you considered relocating to a market that is less competitive but still offers decent quality of life? Sometimes we must think outside the box and make major changes in order to achieve our goals, and if time is not on your side then the only option is to open up the decision space to consider more options. With many jobs being remote these days, people can often pick and choose any community to live, and take their remote job with them. That said, I agree the housing crisis is real and is already happening, with many folks earning sub-middle class incomes feeling the rising cost burden of rent. Unfortunately, rent only goes up.
@First Last There are plenty of countries where home ownership is not even an option, due to corruption, crime, lack of economic opportunity and so on. Fortunately, the US is a country where property ownership is attainable if one is willing to put in the time and hard work to save even a modest amount of capital. The home ownership system in this country might not be perfect but it works rather well for a large enough number of people. If it does not work for a given individual, the first place to look might be in the mirror.
@First Last I can agree with that. Home ownership is fundamental to national identity in the US as a mark of success, and is etched into the social consciousness. It is part of the American Dream. As to reasons for comparison, it is simple: most immigrants do come to the US from 3rd world countries. They therefore feel that they owe it to themselves and their family to 'make it', and you don't make it here until you have something to show for it. What better than a house to be able to say, 'this is mine.' Hard to top that as a symbol of success. And as with anything, where there is strong inflexible demand, there will be supply at all costs, fraud, scams, and hustlers taking advantage of the unsuspecting consumer. Buyer beware.
@@foreign_agent Agree! That's exactly what I had to do. I found a beautiful place 2 months ago. Thank you! Sorry for the late reply. My notifications were off 🙄🤣
Same here, demand far outstrips supply. People are bidding like crazy for subpar listings. The price of lumber is driving new construction prices through the roof and contractors won't build affordable housing because there is no profit in it.
I'm thinking its time for young people to just pool our money together, buy a big plot of land somewhere where land is hella cheap, and create our own city that we can actually afford to live in.
I’ve been stressing this for years...I’ve been saying it’s time for millennials to take over these cities cause these old heads are running it into the ground
@@businessuser632 Age has nothing to do with it. It's a mindset devoid of true values that's doing it. All of us are guilty of that here and there. The people you're trying to describe wallow in it.
My wife and I are in our 40s. Have a single child going into college in the fall. We sold our home 3 years ago and rented so we can move out of NYC when she graduates. Well the time has come and now we get outbid on every home. Our landlord is moving back into our current rental. Now we are packing up to live with my parents. We have plenty of money in the bank and both have jobs. I’m not paying $170k over list price.
Your opportunity to buy will come soon. I was estimating this bubble burst by the 4Q 2021 or by 1Q 2022but the prices keep on climbing at an alarming rate. I think it’s going to pop by summer-fall this year 2Q 2021. Stay the course, don’t buy just yet!
@@steved1880 sadly you should wait it out instead of possibly being upside down on a mortgage that is over priced for the house. It's going to take time and patience but never stop looking, yet, better lock in your rent amount too. Good luck!
@@obamabinladen5055 possibly, we just have a lot of greedy mega investors and a government that refuse to regulate. Plus they sold off most public housing and many lower cost rentals are now being used as air bnb so the cost of renting has skyrocketed.
@@markbrownner6565 my parents are from India but I was born and raised in the US. In Indian culture in America we have this slang term called the "pind lifestyle." The "pind lifestyle" refers to a bunch of Indian people in America who are usually poor that all live together. It could be 2-3 families or even more that live in one house together to survive. It's pretty sad that we could see this "pind lifestyle" apply to Americans that are non-indian. I'm one that doesn't believe it could work for non-indians due to American cultural-ism.
It's not like this in California - we've been seeing a TON of cheap starter homes going up absolutely everywhere. I even see a lot of newly built, affordable beach front starter homes down in L.A., to accommodate the younger generations. They are called "tents".
You're funny. what about the Casual levels of greed for the last 70 years of the middle class and the poor? because if you haven't noticed inflation happens because of government decisions and programs. and when 70% of your taxes are literally paying to buy votes from different groups of people. welfare Social Security other entitlement programs. essentially the reason the inflation goes up. is because of the poor. the taxman knows I can only take so much from the rich. so the politician knows they'll be thrown out of office if they up to taxes on the middle class on the poor. so they just inflate the dollar to pay the bills that the middle class and the poor don't want to pay. so who's really greedy?
Why rushing into getting a home at this time. There are too much unknown with this crazy market. Get your house after the crash if you still have a job...
All humans are greedy, especially the broke ones. The poorer a person becomes, the more desperate and greedy they are. If you were at the top with millions of dollars of homes, you would do the EXACT. SAME. THING.
@@tinchauea this isn't really a housing bubble in the usual way. because people are simply investing their money currently because interest rates are low. but inflations about to hit when the pandemic ends. when that happens house prices may go down a little but they're still going to be way higher than they are now. so it's really about people putting their money into something finite that will increase with inflation. for example I bought a house for $50,000 in 2005. That house is now worth150 to 200k. so at this point you're kind of gambling with your money when you consider inflation. if you don't invest into something before inflation hits. then you can calculate the margin of money you're going to lose out of every dollar you have. and in the last year between both administrations they printed something like 40% of the entire money that ever existed in America. so while you may be able to find something perhaps cheap 4 or 5 Years From now.. there's also the good chance that you're just pissing away money on rent. That's why I suggest people get a van and a gym membership.
Thank you for reporting on this. I've seen it happening like crazy in Tuscon. I asked people moving out of homes they rented from individuals, and they said their previous landlords sold to a company in California.
It’s happening (apart from a few exemptions) through the country here in Washington state an hour away from Seattle (without traffic) mobile homes go for 450,000 I know this because 5 of my siblings are trying to buy homes and my dad with my brother our building 2 houses
You know. There’s other ways to obtaining a home. You can buy in a rural area that offers zero down loans. Live in it for a year then sell and use the proceeds to upgrade to something you actually want. It’s not hard. Your just over analyzing how to do it.
Good luck growing a garden, criminalizing growing your own food has already started in Croatia. Look it up. True story. NOT a conspiracy and I've read this would happen over 16 years ago. ALL part of the global elites evil plan. you'll own NOTHING and you'll like it. BS.
Ugh... Yes this is what it seems like. I'm a Realtor® and it breaks my heart to see this happening. People are creating a situation that isn't going to be good in the end.
People in the U.S. will slowly be squeezed into renting and urban environments. Why aren't we seeing a huge push to supplement home owners will green energy production they can generate for themselves such as solar paneling? There should be panels on every single U.S. home and those in power pushing the green energy and who support the coming carbon penalties should be doing everything they can to see that homes are generating as much of their own clean energy as possible, yet that isn't happening and is being ignored. It's pretty fishy.
@@PhilOrth if history repeats itself, it will be the wave of the housing market flooded with homes that people cannot afford to make the payments, foreclosures, bankruptcy, and the banks refusing to give those massive loans for overinflated prices... supply and demand.
If anyone got the announcement from the Biden administration today it looks like the government is planning to bail out "home owners" by allowing them to stretch their mortgage by up to 40 years. And allowing you to go into forbearance right after purchase.
@@anniesshenanigans3815 but this time around you aren’t seeing ARM’s as the vast majority are fixed rates and there are stricter and more verified DTI’s. So while homes are inflated, qualified borrowers are buying them and even if values drop, the owners will continue to be able to make their payments. What I’m seeing in my market (Phoenix) is that the inventory is sooo low because these institutions are scooping anything and everything up and paired with a large influx of out of state buyers leaving California and other states, it makes for a blood bath of competition when a house hits the market. I just don’t see how there could be a huge crash (at least in my market) other than if the institutional investors dumped their entire pool of homes and jacked the supply up. But why would they do that? I don’t know, I’m just an average joe who is trying to make sense of everything and also been on and off of trying to find a home after selling mine 6 months ago to take my equity out with the thought that the market would drop when it’s only gone up.
@@anniesshenanigans3815 and guess who will gobble up the cheap foreclosures and hold them until the market turns around? The same f*ckers that are buying homes in bulk now. We're turning into a feudal state.
Thank you, global elites who are not Americans but are running America including our amazing military. They have stabbed Americans in the back snd are now done with us and you...
if you are a vet or active duty, then you should be able to qualify for the va home loan, you may have buy in an area that's affordable but it's possible.
@@briandawkins1770 I have VA loan less than 4% interest and live on less than 80k per year with savings in the bank. All it takes is moving to a place where deplorables live. I love it.
16 years of BAH and the ability to use the VA loan along with constantly being stationed in areas with guaranteed paying tenants (military) and you never bought a house? Hardly seems like anyone's fault but yours.
It's so overwhelming to see this happen to the younger generations. It's almost as if they shouldn't even bother trying. It's like a giant strangling a toddler into submission, refusing to let up. The older generations have literally destroyed this country with their greed.
Don’t blame the older generations for something the federal government is responsible for. These young people like big government, and now they’re getting squashed by it.
@@sarahdohring1551 - wrong. Government mandated sub prime lending..amongst a host of other things. Combined with ballooning deficits and non stop printing of money, you get what you get. There are consequences to being 30 TRILLION in debt and pumping money no nstop. Regulation? When is the last time dc effectively regulated anything 😂 they can’t even balance a budget
I lost my house in 08 and hated life but guess what I just realized? This year would have been 30 years and that house would been mine. I'm glad my father died before we lost the house cuz he didn't have to see what he worked for his whole life get taken away from us.
I’m watching young engineers get locked out of the housing market. It’s insane. How many people are we going to lock out before we do something about real estate speculation?
I'm a young engineer and expect to be able to afford a decent starter home in the current market by my late 20's (well, 20%). No gift money or unfair advantages. My job doesn't pay amazing or anything either (it's good, just not great by engineering standards). Real estate prices are very high for my state and being on the west coast just makes it more expensive. Still, just sticking to a budget and good planning go a very long way. Especially helpful to look for side income sources. If I had dual income it would be far more achievable as well
My family bought a house in central Coeur d’Alene, ID in 2012 and it has QUADRUPLED! We don’t feel good about it tho because we know we can’t sell it. Where would we go? Pay half a million for another house? This hurts everyone who isn’t rich. Even if you own a home, you still feel trapped.
@@smokedbeefandcheese4144 I mean it’s a great place and I don’t plan to move, but it’s one thing being where you want to be and always being able to move if an opportunity comes up. It’s quite another when you know you are locked into where you’re at (like it or not, you ain’t moving). @YankeeSpirit I am multi lingual and that doesn’t make me feel any better. I wouldn’t mind owning a house in Latin America, but I don’t want to be far from family all the time. My point here was that the housing hyperinflation affects everyone - home owners or renters. We are all stuck in place.
I’m in cda as well! I know a lot of average people around here who have sold their homes for great returns and I’m super happy for them. Unfortunately like a lot of people here in my age group (young millennial locals) I feel I’m getting squeezed out. I know so many people who are getting kicked out of their rentals even as the landlords either want to sell or raise rent $500 more a month. The housing in cda just can’t keep up as well as the wages.
Wow, it really wasn't a surprise to see the villains behind the next housing crisis. Why must we continue to repeat history. By the way, this was a great coverage. Thank you.
It’s bs. This report looks at only small geographical areas in this country to skew the numbers to make their point that “rich people are evil”. Suburban and urban housing prices are always in a constant bubble then burst pattern due to the constant changes in demand for that housing. Of course, the average person doesn’t know this so vids like this can brainwash you into thinking there’s some evil plot happening when in fact it’s just the normal flow of business in the real estate world.
@@acedeadeye2052 no BS. Anyone with half a brain can see there is something desperately wrong with the housing market. I knew we were in trouble when 2 years ago I saw home builders offering zero down homes. I said, look, it’s starting again, the same nonsense that led to 2008. Then you add in the “cash offer” weirdness. The only part that is truly bizarre is, why on earth would investors buy at the top of the market? From an investment standpoint, that sounds like exactly what you shouldn’t do. What’s the full story? Add to that even places like nowhere Iowa is seeing price inflation. Missoula Montana too. Virtually anywhere you look, the prices are inflated. It is NOT select markets. It’s nationwide. And from what I’m seeing from others in Europe and Australia, same thing there. Something is going on. Not sure what exactly. I don’t think this program really explained it all.
Norwegian here. Here you pay 40% in taxes when you sell your second home. You are free to sell the house you live in, but you need to have lived there for two years if you also own more than one house.
@@soyouthought8231 Fine, but my close friend in Denmark tells me the same thing is happening there. Home prices are through the roof. The central bank in Denmark has also suppressed interest rates. People, the central banks are causing this! (Financial suppression, i.e., deliberately suppressing interest rates to force investors into assets.)
Wrong. One year, or you need to pay tax - if you have made money when selling - after one year there is no tax. However in norway you still need two high incomes to afford to buy a house. There is a reason why birth rates are dropping here, only a few can afford children these days.
The housing is insane in LA right now. Housing was already insane here - but a house that was going for $650K now easily goes for over $1,000,000. It's unreal.
It’s called record low interest rates... lower rates mean you can buy more house for a lower payment. With all the buyers wanting to buy now due to the lower interest it drives the price up.
I've been thinking about moving to Florida because I can work remotely now However, the Florida prices are increasing at a rate that I cannot accept. It is not a good time to buy.
I clean pools in Rodanthe, NC. Its getting to a point here were businesses are suffering because there is no where for working class people to live. Everything is a weekly rental or air bnb. Its a living nightmare
@@wackkawack6640 What they do is build and entire new home around the old structure. So they will build a 4,000 square ft home around that old house. Very common in the DMV (DC, Maryland, Virginia) area.
They'll tear it down and rebuild a new home OR fix it just enough to look like all the home cable shows and sell it for a profit. The thing is, the neighborhood will determine if that works or not. I grew up outside of DC. THere are areas in MD I would not move to if you paid me to live there. Outsiders don't know this and many have taken a loss thinking they could flip it after fixing a house up. Nope. The house has good bones...will be intersting to see what happens to it.
idk what that means, but this is just part of the logic of capitalism. The more consolidation, the more power, and the more exploitation that can be carried out. I don't think it's a conspiracy that it's in the interest of the elite to buy everyone else out of house and home and raise rents
@@Gerg1n8eR He meant the World Economic Forum's 'Great Reset' plan for the next decade, which ironically is an organization of exactly the types of powerful people you just described :)
@@Gerg1n8eR - if you think this is a result of capitalism you’re mistaken. A federal government that is 30 trillion in debt, and continuing to print and spend at atrocious levels is not capitalist or free market in any sense of the word. Capitalism requires one to balance a budget or else you go into debt and your life’s work gets sold to the highest bidder.
@@billbillson5082 It's not a free market, and I'll grant you that there is a difference between the status quo and your libertarian ideal, but it is still capitalist. The economy is made up of private companies in private hands. Yes, the government spends money, but still those companies are in private hands. And then there's the part where the government spending overwhelmingly goes to either the finance sector -- capitalists, the military industrial complex -- capitalists, social spending -- ends up with landlords and local businesses aka capitalists, healthcare/pharma/insurance -- capitalists, and so on. So the spending is at the behest of capitalism, because government policy is set by the donors of politicians -- capitalists. So when you say "this can't be capitalism because the government spends money" please understand that I don't believe you after I look at the government and see all this. What I do believe is that your capitalist ideal is not the only true capitalism like you claim, but is instead a subset of capitalism. Call it "Libertarian Capitalism" or "Free Market Absolutist Capitalism" or something to differentiate it, but I suspect that you'll have little luck redefining terms people already use.
Thats my fear Im 31 single income house (wife is a stay at home mom) I don't think I will ever be able to afford a home. It just keeps getting more and more expensive and we just can't keep up.
It can only end with extreme deflation. Be patient, keep an immaculate credit score and the banks will be begging for people to take these houses off their hands
Eventually “we will own nothing and be happy”. World Economic Forum. They want everyone to be renting from the government, just like in communist Russia and China.
@@rebelwithacause5217 In our dreams we could be so lucky. The truth is that it's the wealthy elite are F'n our collective holes. We the people don't stand a chance. They own the media their taking heads keep us divided. All this, so as to have someone to hate or complain about. All this so we can't see how we are being F'd. Hate the liberal, hate the conservative, the wealthy elite don't care. They want you to hate the other so that they can rob us all and get away with it. The fools will die with their last breath damming the wrong entity. There are few true faith Republicans, there are some true faith Democrats. The rest democracy
Just wait till you see how much inventory there will be this summer/fall when forbearance ends. For everyone feeling FOMO, don't buy a house now. You'll owe more than your house is worth in 6 months
They are already modifying loans to add the missing payments to the back end of the loan. Also, Biden has proposed current homeowners who are behind can extend to 40 year mortage.
My wife and I are 34 living in the Philadelphia suburbs. This video summarizes our attempt to purchase a home perfectly. The values are so inflated in our area for a single family home that we’ve basically given up for the time being
Depends on where you buy. Im Moving to El Paso Texas from Denver Co where homes are still very affordable. Here in Denver its also getting very insanely expensive. All homes now are half a million dollars or more.
@H H exactly what they said. i was looking for a single home to buy. i put in couple offers. price is pretty good ,but still got out bidden by other buyers
Where do these people go, when they can’t afford the home or rent. This makes me so upset just down right sick to my stomach, families are being torn apart. Many of these people don’t know where the next meal is coming from.
@dearnaomi How much on average for a one bedroom studio in a decent area? Or even how much usually just for someone to get an airbnb by themselves for a few months?
Texas makes sense however, we do have a good system here. Austin is the problem of texas because its growing too fast and all these houses are overpriced and only people with money win them and then the areas become too wealthy and with a single recession, this becomes a problem. If everything is too high, the taxes dont come back down so youll still have your payments plus the steady increasing taxes.
@@homehere9817 lumber prices have gone up astronomically over the past year. Between COVID shutting down mills and various disasters last year, supply is at an all time low. Plus a lot of folk had spare time at home and a few projects to work on so demand spiked during early COVID. I've been told the cost to build a new modest sized 3/2 has increased by $35-$45k just since last year. Plus, due to social distancing, contractors can't work as fast. Add to this the lack of folks working construction and we have a massive problem for building new.
I tried to purchase a home with what I thought a good down payment, a plus credit and having longevity in a career would get you. Now I'm binge watching van life videos.
What's going on should not be legal. Making renters out of all of us should not be acceptable to either party. We need legislation to prevent these entities from screwing with us in yet one more way.
40% profit Saagar? I bought my home for $155k in the mid 1990s. It’s a 1920s 3/2 in a (now) upscale area, and it hasn’t been significantly updated since 1930. Recent Zillow value is $470k, but bids would be 25% higher. That’s insane. I could never afford this neighborhood if I were starting my career today!
Thats why it hurts the younger millennials so much who want to start a new family. When people bash on that generation, they dont understand that the days of affordable housing is gone.
Relatively same scenario here. Bought our house brand new in 2006 for $160k and realtor estimates are around $265k. Not quite as big of a jump as you, but I just imagine trying to move and realizing we would be paying more money for less house if we did 😂
Here in Pittsburgh, entire neighborhoods of brick row homes in the east end that were sold for $25-35k 20 years ago, are now being sold for $300-400k now...it's ridiculous.
SF Bay Area. Just closed a deal for $1.35M fir 1st time homebuyers. I'm a,loan officer. I despise these markets. Used to help people buy homes for $500k. Can't get a condo for that. It's the have & have nots. Tech workers In companies earn stock so they become wealthy.
The truth: this is a class issue and class warfare. Don't let anyone, not even The Hill, divide us into groups and start us pointing the finger at each other. Personally, I don't know any people in any ethnic or age group (millennial or otherwise) who have $900,000 lying around to purchase a house for cash at 25% above an already hyper-inflated market value. Do you? Krystal, on the other hand, is worth $44 million, and while I respect the fact that she is willing to report on issues like this, she is affected by none of it.
Janet Yellen said her one regret as Fed chair was not raising your cost of living higher.... Wonder how many times the major new sources mentioned that over Gender Pronouns... Yep, they got us right where they want us....
Live in Boise and it's absolutely insane. I've been saving for 4 years and have been completely priced out. I'd move back to Texas if my kids didn't live here with my ex. Our real estate market is ridiculous for years now. Thank you Californians!!
I'm not surprised. I've heard that the housing market in Boise in particular is really bad right now. People are fleeing expensive west coast cities and driving up prices in Boise.
@@gooberstankable It is a crisis! I live in Kansas City and it is much the same here. I had a friend offer $40k over asking price for an ordinary starter house in a suburb of KC and she still got outbid. Something has to give. This is not sustainable long term.
@@97I30T I believe it's sustainable. Many of these home will be rented out. People need a place to live and if they can't afford to build or buy for themselves, they will be forced to rent. I believe that's the greater plan.
Because so many people overpaid for homes even while loan rates were low, I believe there will be a housing catastrophe because these people are in debt. If housing costs continue to drop and, for whatever reason, they can no longer afford the property and it goes into foreclosure, they have no equity since, even if they try to sell, they will not make any money. I believe that many individuals will experience this, especially given the impending mass layoffs and rapidly rising living expenses.
I advise you to invest in stocks to balance out your real estate, Even the worst recessions offer wonderful buying opportunities in the markets if you're cautious. Volatility can also result in excellent short-term buy and sell opportunities. This is not financial advice, but buy now because cash is definitely not king right now!
Soon, cheap homes won't be cheap anymore because prices today will look like dips tomorrow. I think inflation will cause panic until the Fed tightens its grip even more. You can't just pull the band-aid Off half way. Booms and busts are the ups and downs of the economy, and they will affect any investments. If you are at a crossroads or need honest advice on the best steps to take right now, it is best to get counsel from a financial expert.
@@jeffery_Automotive I need a guide so i can salvage my port-folio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can one reach this advisor?
I personally work with 'Julie Anne Hoover’’ she covers things like investing, insurance, making sure retirement is well funded, going over tax benefits, ways to have a volatility buffer for investment risk. many things like that. Just take a look at her full name on the internet. She is well known so it shouldn't be hard to find her.
@@jeffery_Automotive Thanks for this advice. Finding your financial advisor was easy after looking her name up. I found her website afterwards, left a message and hope she get back to me soon.
Maybe we’re crazy but after getting eight offers on our home, we refused to sell to the arrogant cash offer highest bidder and sold to the young couple who wanted a safe place to raise their family.
The family I bought my house from did the same thing for me. You rock!
Good to hear there are people out there like you ❤ we are a family of 6, 4 kids... and we desperately need more space. We are living in 912 square foot right now and we are literally busting out of the seams 🤣 the market is so bad that when we do find something that would work for us and we can afford it there are always several offers and it quickly goes over what we can afford and we don't ever really have that chance. This gives me hope that our house right for us is out there . This is also how my friends recently got her house a few months ago. The older man chose her bc she had a family 👪
Good on you!!! That's great that you recognized a 'real' win-win situation and made a difference in the new buyers life.
respect. Thank you! I’m 24 and want to buy soon so I hope I get someone like you
Thank you, that's why we have our home now.
Sold my house in one day to vet with a his veterans loan. He was not the highest bidder. But he lives there with his family.
We have to take it in our own hands on an individual basis. Protect each other. ❤️
@Guinness718 It was good Ole covid time, so we didn't get to sit at the table and talk and sign. He gave a note to my realtor. I did not regret my decision, I was happy for them. They had been looking and saving and getting out bid. What's a couple thousand dollars in the scheme of things. I come from a long line of vets. Thank you for your service Guinness718
It’s amazing that you did that and I wish other sellers would stop these businesses from knocking people like my boyfriend and I (first time home buyers) out of the market. Unfortunately people just see $$$ and won’t do what you did.
I wish everyone was had morals and values like you. 💜
We also sold our home to a young man using a VA loan because we knew so many other sellers would refuse him just for that.
My father told me 30 years ago: Homes will become like farms. If you're not born into one, you'll never own one.
I wouldn't go that far. Real estate values go up and down. It's cyclical but generally prices go up over decades. Work hard, save money and you will get your home. Mortgages are not as hard to get today as they were 10 years ago.
wow
Your name checks out.
Housing prices are skyrocketing even in Red states
@ What Biden bucks?
People actually have to care about their fellow man or woman. Don’t sell to these crooks. Sell to a family trying to put a roof over their heads.
Only way to do this is to sell the property yourself, agents work on commissions and are easily swayed by big$ offers.
@@chrismckell5353 not completely true. Realtors work for sellers and buyers. When selling my house I can choose who I sell it to. The realtor will always try to get you to go for the most money but you don’t have to
That's the strategy... make it so hard to live that compassion for your neighbors is a fatal error. Divide and conquer, the most fundamental of strategies. And they're trying to divide by the maximum possible amount.
They soon won’t let you sell or remortgage unless you have a heat pump system fitted. $.25,000 plus. Per system.
SELL for what the Market is willing to PAY...
Only someone who doesn't understand economics would do otherwise.
Not being able to buy a home has also meant that all the apartments are completely full up. You need dual income to afford a 1 bedroom apartment in the Pacific Northwest.
Yes, and now the pension funds are buying up the single family inventory to add to their portfolio of apartment properties. There is no where live unless you have a tent and a hardy disposition.
Most people now have a dual income or another stream of money
Or the rent has gone past what one can afford.
You can buy a 200k home in Midwest and pay 1,000 a month. It's your fault if you choose to live somewhere ridiculous.
@@Shapiro-bn6mb you can buy one for less. Land is cheap too. People just don't really understand the power of a dollar anymore with a plan
This plays into the world economic forum and how they want the average person to rent everything and own nothing
The only solution to any of this is millions of us in the streets shutting down the system until we bring the government to its knees.
Yep, but you’ll never hear anything about The Great Reset on Rising or the Hill. Russell Brand has some good videos about it though,
@@Revolution-tl5wo are you going to lead the charge..??
capitalism at it's finest, an American tale. Grab as much resources as you can, profit.
@@Revolution-tl5wo Its not the government. Its the businesses. You have to bring the businesses that are creating and driving these conditions to their knees.
I live in MD. Bought our house for $415k in 2017. Based off of neighborhood comps and sales within the past 12 months, our house would be put on the market at 570k and sell in a day. Unfortunately, can’t afford to buy, so what’s the point... 38% increase in 4 years. Something bad is about to happen
I tell you what, I am very happy to own a home right now. If I were to sell it, I would demand more than double it's last appraisal amount. I'm not selling it though because I know I will have an extremely difficult time finding another that would be suitable. My wife wants to sell and move but that's crazy right now. I feel for people who are taking new jobs and have to relocate.
@@danielsherwood585 show her the graphs if you can find them. This is definitely a bubble
I can't even afford a camper at this point because they are a hot commodity for all the people who can't afford a real home here.
^^^This is real right here
Just bought a new very small camper in thurmont Maryland, for 17k, $180 a month, 10 % down. For my son. It's very possible.
Why would you want to? It's an investment that goes down in value....
@@byronsmith6736 Compared to what? Throwing money down the drain renting an expensive apartment?
Bought rare Nissan Sunrader. Listed 2 years ago , $4k, a year ago, $10k, presently, depending on condition $15k to $20.
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My wife and I have no debt, work middle class jobs, save a lot, have parents that gift us money, and live in a low cost state with no kids. We are 26 and 25. We still cannot afford 20% down on anything livable. I can't imagine how people less privileged than us are doing. The American dream is dead.
LOL. You guys are young. Just wait till she is popping out kids and isn't able to contribute financially and then try buying a house.
Although 20% down is preferred, you can still get qualified for a loan with less. And if everything you said is true, you may want to check your expenses. It shouldn't be too hard to save in a low cost state...
Really?
Best part of veteran benefits is that you don’t have to put any money down and you don’t have to pay PMI when you don’t. I never would have been able to buy a house without the veteran benefits.
It's a dream for a reason. I hope you get some luck soon.
The housing bubble of 07-08 never ended, they stuck a bandaid on the big banks and that was it.
They should have let the banks bleed in 2008 and restructure.. They pain would have been great for a couple of years but we would have healed sooner... All that money printing needs to go somewhere.. And it obviously didn't go to wages
The banks are in trouble, what should we do?
I don’t know! Quick, call the failing banks!
that is an incorrect statement. i went thru the bubble as a builder and lost business home and spouse because of it. it popped and its growing again.
@@markduncan1149 It popped for you and millions of honest hard working folks like you.
It didn't pop for the people that caused the crisis and continue to profit off of it. They were bailed out.
@@markduncan1149 how did you lose your spouse?
“It is called the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it!”- George Carlin
Move somewhere else then.
And you can only live in the dream house in your dreams lol.
Miss that guy!
@@nathanbreakfast7424 I like to smear melted ruth baby bars all over my deformed body. Who am I?
@@nathanbreakfast7424 says the boy living in his mom's basement
This is exponential poverty. We will soon have 2 class of people : landowners and renters. Jumping from one class to another will be nearly impossible.
That is already the way it is.
I thought we already had that.
That is EXACTLY why the French Revolution happened and why they invented the Guillotine.
Interest rates must be RAISED.
Low rates deplete purchasing power. Working class folks use their money to mostly purchase things. They aren’t holding assets which get bid up via lower rates. They work for wages and pay for their lifestyle with those wages. The need to borrow anything imposes a burden but the real hustle is the belief that lower rates are helpful, when they are not. Lower rates are great when you’re the seller, but the RE market is driven by first time buyers. Those are folks who do not need to first sell in order to buy.
It's been this way since 2009 crash bro
It is hard to emphasize how important this is...
Only thing wrong about this report is that this bubble isn't going to pop. House prices will never go down again... the peasant population are about to slip back into permanent serfdom and if you don't own your own home you will be one of them.
@@dannyboy8474 sad truth.
@@dannyboy8474 ... Pitch forks and guillotines.
@@dannyboy8474 own? Try not paying property tax.
@@dannyboy8474 Complete truth. There's simply nothing that will cause a fall in prices like everyone is secretly hoping for. We don't have deadbeats signing onto bad loans this time around. What will happen - these are assets, and the value of them will climb. And with the spending level that is coming out of Congress for this over-freaking-blown pandemic, expect inflation like the 1970's and early 1980's. Assets are a hedge against inflation, thus enhancing the wealth of these giants. In the end, none of you will be able to afford the houses unless wages magically go up for once for the middle class. Homeownership dreams are basically dead. Move to the country, that's about your only hope.
This has been going on in California for the last 20 years. That house in Palo Alto would go for $2M
I thought the same thing about where I live in Southern California. Half a million would be super cheap!
I was gonna say, this is really nothing. Krystal and all these enablers should see how far ivory tower logic can go to save an average citizen. Denial of free market capitalism didn’t go that well in the Bay Area
@@yn5568 Amazing that your takeaway here is that we just need more unregulated capitalism. Did you even watch the segment?
Poor California. Liberal policies have ruined that great state. $250,000 homes in Oklahoma City would be $1,000,000 in California.
Denver is maybe 6 years into a steep incline. I'm getting pushed out of the city, unable to even rent, making 65k a year. v.v
This is my plan. I’ll get my pension/retirement in 10 years. Im leaving the US. Headed to central or South America and living the rest of my days away from this. Don’t fall for the “work til you drop and own nothing” scheme. Good luck everyone, we gonna need it.
i agreed with ya. Make money save it and retire else where lol
Look into Nicaragua I've heard of and seen many nice retirement communities there! Also Colombia is really nice.
If you want to end your life early....third world country not for me
It's not politically stable in those parts of the world you want to live in. You're endangering yourself.
@@Scampergirl it’s not politically stable here either…
The really sick thing about all this is that if these huge businesses fail, they will be bailed out with taxpayers' money. The government should ban speculative purchases.
The citizens should ban governments that get so big then can spend trillions of dollars on bailouts.
They've privatized the profits and socialized the losses. Genius, brought to you by the fraudulent legal concept called Corporate Citizenship and endorsed by all major politicians of both parties.
@@demontwashington5388 you sir, are a genius. Semper fi
@@demontwashington5388 SPOT ON
The Government should have never sticked their nose into the housing market. They just end up causing choas every time.
"You will own nothing, and you will be happy." The rich have already told us what our future is going to be.
Is it OK if I don't play along with that vision?
Buy gme
As rich people always love to tell poor people.... "Money doesn't buy happiness!!".
Don’t blame the investors. They’re only following your lead. The youngest generations have pretty much rejected traditions like marriage, raising kids, mortgages, and the sacrifices those entail. Employers, lenders, and other institutions can’t take you seriously because you don’t take them seriously. Live like arrested adults with no commitments and be glad that investors are building apartments for you.
I knew this rich guy he lived off the poor he will finance properties and when they missed a payment boom his lawyers will take over the property and he will do it again and again I believe a lot of people do that
We need very solid first time home buyer programs and financial literacy classes in all high schools as a required course.
Yeah, and out with that hatefilled FEM, woke bs.
No; we need to require homes be sold to individuals, not corporate entities. Any house foreclosed must be re-sold within a year or the government seizes it for use as public council housing like pre-Thatcher UK.
Oh thats so cute. The people who want the government shrunk to nothing also want a first-time homebuyers program. Oh and they blame the “woke” sjws for the absence of such a program. How precious.
It's not so simple, last time this was part of the reason of the 2008 crisis/collapse. Bush made it easier for those with less funds to buy houses and but those home owners didn't have stable income and.... boom. The number one priority I think would get rid of that student debt and make higher education mode accessible. (don't forget vocational) The better the jobs people have the better things will be. Education is the start of some kind of restore of the American Dream (which I doubt will come back, but maybe the widening gap can be stopped). Who wants to compete with low-wage countries on manufacturing or compete with a tsunami of automation ? Higher skill/education level is the only thing safe harbour. But it's hard to know which sector, etc.
We need a functional HUD.
WATCHING THESE BLOGS IS INFORMING AND DEPRESSING AT THE SAME TIME!
The exact way I feel.
Very true. I feel the need to be informed even though sometimes it makes me sad. But there's so much to learn and more information popping up everyday!
It's really frustrating to be in a position now to buy a home, but to see every 3 bedroom home either falling apart and overpriced or in good condition but over bidded for by well over 50k.
Bruh, same. We are lucky in that we do not HAVE to move. We are comfortable where we are but are looking to build wealth and personal growth with a home... but the market is bonkers and we might be better off waiting for the market to correct. However, for the public that will mean forbearance claims to finally be called and foreclosures to finally take effect. It's tough and sad, but it has to happen for regular buyers to have a place at the table again.
Just sold my home, moved back in with parents. Be patient and keep saving my plqn is to buy some trophy real estate when the bottom drops out. 6 months tops
@@leggoego What's going to cause this to drop? The big players won't allow it. Nobody's moving anywhere new.
That is exactly how the Obama housing crisis started.
@@SunnyCarnivore incorrect
I just went through this UNFAIR MADNESS. I’m so glad SOMEONE is talking about it and I’m NOT CRAZY!!!
I’m a Realtor and I’ve seen it coming while colleagues and Brokers play this crisis down.
It’s insane in my area.
@@cw6410 where are you located!
?
@@truthteller7331 What can the little guy do? Do we wait and miss the low interest rates?
I live with my grandma, I have a better chance inheriting the house when she dies than I do affording a house in the next 10-20 years. Waiting for my grandma to die, what a great system.
Fox News agrees sacrificing grandma for the economy is worth it
Pretty much everywhere in the world most people do not own a home. Americans got spoiled after WW2 because they were the only big economy left unscathed. Welcome to how the rest of the world lives you whiny losers.
As the saying goes..."Those of us that can, do. Those of us that can't, teach (or live in mama's/grandma's basement, waiting for them to die).
As crazy as it sounds... im in the same position.
@@ilovegoodsax That was a bit of a weird answer, so you guys do realize that it's nothing new here.
Yeah, like this is how rich families pass on their wealth to their children and grandchildren.
We absolutely need legislation against companies or private investors trying to buy out communities.
We could use some tax revenue, how about tack on a premium for institutional investors buying single family homes.
@@GalenMatson That is one tax
that I could absolutely get behind, and I hate taxation and most all government programs.
You guys don't realize it's the government who allowed this to happen through bail outs and collusions with the same institutions your complaining about. The government is the problem. If they stayed out of the free market and allowed these institutions to go under and if they jailed those that committed fraud, we wouldn't be where we are at.
@@Achilles5937 Jonah, I agree with you, but there is a role for the government in this, specifically a government whose primary role is to protect the American people. What if google just started buying endless swaths of residential real estate? We are hitting a point where the people need to have protections from these corporate monsters that in some respects are just as powerful as nation states but with zero accountability to the people. I say that recognizing these political snakes are all bought-out with a few rare exceptions.
@@Achilles5937 You are correct. The market is an ecosystem and the government keeps using synthetic methods manipulate it. A free market won't be free of greed, but it will naturally correct itself.
Saagar, I feel your pain. I live in MD and my landlord gave me notice too. Nothing else available. Our culture is dominated by greed.
Good luck man, greed really is destroying America, the only way to stop it is to elect people that will
So let’s put aside our differences and go on a nation wide strike!
The police cannot arrest everyone!
💪💪
@@Jackass_Gamer : It's also international ... A lot of that money is from China, too!
Wrong, it is the free market as it should be
@@paula4910 so people should lose their houses because “something something free market?”
I disagree that nobody saw the 2008 real estate burst coming. I saw it when I sold my house in 2004. I mean it was unprecedented that the value of my house doubled in 8 years. And the buyers of my house were given a loan of 105% of the purchase price. Then I read that people had taken out balloon mortgages. Then, I was offered a "no doc" loan to purchase a condo. I mean the red flags were HUGE.
I bought a small house in Orlando Florida (in 2001) for $105,000 @ 4.25% for 30 years......I had a feeling in 2006 something wasn't right because my house appraised at $265,000 .....So I went ahead and sold it at that time....... Then 2008 came around....... I purchased a Winnebago and have been travelling for (12) years and currently in Arizona ....... The same thing that happened in 2008 is happening now....even worse !
@Dwayne Peters The real estate bust was 1999. I was a foreclosure paralegal. Houses were over evaluated and banks were lending at 125% and balloon payments were a standard.Then the IT world imploded and all these loans went into foreclosure with people owing 100+% of their original mortgages. It was insane and it was really depressing to watch so many people lose their homes
@Eric Douglas Either interest rates go up crashing the markets to j Clyde the US government debt, or they print even more money that inflation starved you to death (not exaggerating )Get a professional advise or a broker you can leverage on his expertise.
@Eric Douglas They're a handful of them, however, names like Naomi Nicole Rhodes are exceptional. Just look up the name on the web and follow the prompts and contact her.
@@aigajenkinson2495 I SAW IT IN 2006 WHEN I SOLD MY CONDO IN FLORIDA JUST IN TIME. BUT I WAS TRAINED TO SEE IT,MY PROFESSOR IN 2000 EXPLAINED THE TECH BUBBLE TO US.
This is why you guys are my favorite news show! No one else is really talking about this issue...
This was a really great radar today
Check out The Money GPS channel 👍
My friends and I have been talking about this since early summer last year. So many people fled NYC that rents are temporarily down, but property ownership is becoming even further consolidated, so we expect rents and home prices to increase significantly in a year.
@@crazycat1232 I mean by banks and management companies, like their piece discusses. In NYC management companies pool their resources and set up LLC upon LLC upon LLC so that you can't even figure out who owns the building you live in without lawyers.
@@crazycat1232 Exactly, it hurts renters and potential buyers, and the difference in how an independent building owner operates even if they are a landlord is incredibly different than what a building management owning 25+ apartment buildings does to its tenants. They break laws constantly, but are much more difficult to get any recourse from than if you know the couple of people who own your building. They can flagrantly violent tenant laws because they have so much money to defend themselves or tie you up in court. For example, my landlord where i've been living for 7.5 years owns a rent stabilized building and was charging me well over market value ($3500 a month) for an apartment registered with the city for $540!!!! I luckily figured this out and am now suing them for $600k.
Earlier this week, I offered 300k for a house listed that was listed for 225k that was bought 3 years ago for 160k with no renovations or changes and got outbid... very demoralizing.
You might have dodged a bullet.
You're crazy then
Major first world problems.
Been trying to buy a house in the Northeast for almost 2 years. We finally gave up and stopped looking. It's depressing.
The northeast is a wide swath of territory. If you are living in one of the affluent areas than yes but there are many more places that are not than are so you must be in an expensive area. I have lived all up and down the east coast and there are cheap places to live.
😔
Well according to Krystal, just keep saving a little longer and when it crashes, buy :) you're welcome...
Imagine tryna rent with a moratorium nobody wants to take a chance so they are looking for 700 credit score and u to be able to pay 3x the rent just move in
We just purchased a home in new England for 70k. We put about 20k into it & the appraisal we just had came back at 140k. Now is a great time to buy in the NE, you just have to consider the area.
It's very sad for people like us, 3 children and very little hope of owning a home
Your time will come, be patient, stock-pile your cash - the dip will come...trust me, 40 year Real Estate/Appraiser.
@@yeliab67 it's much different times then it was back then, corporations have no soul, they only care about money. The more housing they own the more they can set the prices, it's not going to drop when they own the majority and need to maintain their set profit margins, it's only going to go up.
@@yeliab67 I will stock-pile something else, not cash when the dollar is depreciating,
things are not getting expensive, currencies are worth less
Move to Missouri you can buy a house in the sticks for 35 k
@@2100suprafreak no it isn't. Back in the day people used to get married, buy a house and then start to have kids. Not have 3 and then try and figure out where to live.
"They call it the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it"
~George Carlin~
That is because guys like George Carlin believe the American Dream is getting Rich and Famous. Most people will never be multi millionaires or household names. The real American Dream is being able to support your family and enjoy the fruits of your labor without Tyrants dictating to you what you can and can't do with your time and money.
I don’t care what any other guy thinks I just want to be healthy 80 years enjoy my life my family to the fullest and die in peace.
You could spam this on any Rising video from the past 6 years and be right lol
@@porkfriedrice1530 why spam?
@@sirensmelodyltd6118 you obviously don't know much about George Carlin, if you think that he thought the American dream was being rich and famous.
You know what, not that long ago all you needed to have was a decent job and your wife could stay home and raise your family and you both would have a car and a beautiful house, not so anymore. And do we know why that is children?
With the crash of 2008
I lost my home to the bank.
From that day on I decided to be my own Bank and all my savings have been in gold and silver out of the banking system for over a decade. Being financially independent is the best way of Freedom.
You should get bitcoin. Be your own bank and build wealth from there. Good luck.
This is important. WallSt no longer invests in businesses. They want the asset of the middle class: their home.
Investors are willing to PAY whatever they calculate an ASSET is worth.
The only difference between Wall Street and Working Class is,
The Working Class doesn't know what Capitalism is.
@@reasonablespeculation3893 you haven't ever seen capitalism, unless of course you are a few hundred years old.
"young people to just pool our money together" Why CAN'T Joey, Monica, Chandler, Ross & Rachel pool their $ and send their Notary, Phoebe to purchase on behalf of "Friends LLC?"
What good will all of those homes do, sitting empty with no buyers? Every suburb, of every America city will eventually be abandoned and look like suburban Detroit.
@@2jz4me25 I bought my first home on my own at 23, 28 now and I'm going to sell before the summers end because there is a controlled pop of the bubble coming by design. Wake up. It's called learn the structures and games they play and play them to your own advantage. I did. Don't be a neck beard.
Thank goodness I live in a rural area. Low housing costs, low crime, clean air and water. Boring? Well.....you can keep your urban excitement. Peace and quiet are highly underrated.
Right there with you brother.
@@craigbowen4659 Yeah not so much. The Cult of Woke crowd does not like the boonies.
Amen!
@@Sarandib22 There are always opportunity costs in life.
Yeah I'm looking to move to a more rural area. I'm young and black, but I work from home now and I love the peace and quiet of open country. Plus, I just started getting obsessed with dirt bikes and so I would really like to be near open fields, trails, and dirt roads. I also stopped hunting when I moved to the city for school so I'd like to get back into that.
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered." - Thomas Jefferson, a founding father of the U.S.A.
Land was free idk how tf we got to paying for it
@@lifesucksgetoverit5440 So true. I also believe the reason behind these ridiculous increases in appraisals on homes every year is so states can collect that much more in taxes.
@@lifesucksgetoverit5440 there’s a building on the land.
@@lifesucksgetoverit5440 land speculators like George Washington (one of America's 5 richest presidents ever) decided that land should be a thing we pay for
They knew banks are so evil
I had multiple offers, some cash, some waiving inspections! I decided to sell to the under asking offer, a nice woman and her wife! I feel so proud of myself.
God will bless you for your act of kindness.
How do you know they're real? I was not allowed to meet my seller so i could have written anything in my letter...
You should be proud. We have been looking in western United States Southern Ca for over a year and because we refuse to start our mortgage already upside down we can’t find a home as of right now. Totally tragic
Wow that's great, make sure you tell everyone what a really good person you are. 👏
Good for you. Some of us just need a kind person to give us a chance!
Home inspector here... I’ve been screaming about this since the back half of last year!
Not only are all of these houses selling for way above asking price, they are competing with an average of 15-20 other bidders so they have to waive inspection contingencies and buy “as is” ... the amount of costly defects I find every year is staggering.. and gets added on top of the excess cash spent to purchase the home THIS BUBBLE IS GOING TO HURT
When do you think it will burst
@@AndrewDavid84 2Q or 3Q 2021 I’m guessing
@@AndrewDavid84 No body knows, this is different than 08. People that are buying are buying with cash, that means they have equity in the house. Keep an eye on when government forebearance will end, that will give you a window on when things might go south.
Except this is nothing like 2007/2008. Banks today have extreme strict lending standards (no NINJA loans) and these buyers today are high earning dual income households that have the cash/assets to purchase these homes.
Thanks for that insight. I never would have even considered that.
"you will own nothing and be happy" is one of the scariest quotes I have ever heard.
You already own nothing, buy something and pay property tax on it for life. In essence you are renting from the government.
@@lancetheman28 Ah yes, and the government calls it for services.
no i have a 2017 mazda miata rf ,ill be ok. im taking it to heaven
Isn't that the line they used in africa to get folks on that boat??
@@TheLakemead1 Dude, sweet.
I worked for the banks as an inspector during the financial crisis and I saw them come in and buy blocks and blocks of homes, artificially driving up pricing.
Awful deceitful practice!
Did you, speak up? Question it? Feel bad? Leave? What?
@@Pytor007 Probably nothing
@@Gunner77269 agree with you 💯on this one...
what can one man do?
This radar aged super well. Miss when they were on the hill.
I work in real estate on the West Coast. I crunched numbers locally, and 46% of buyers in my market have been priced out of the market. Our market is fueled by remote workers, but will struggle when there are no more teachers, nurses, mechanics, and service people left to keep the city running.
They can learn to educate themselves, heal themselves, and fix their cars by watching UA-cam.
😆
@@tylertyler82 They can learn coding.... just like the coal miners and truck drivers!
And amazingly no one will get raises or benefits to be able to keep those jobs.
@@SRT480 Then the housing bubble bursts and those who invested all that $ go bankrupt. Home prices drop, and that's when the smart people pounce.
@@joncarbone 15 years ago I would have agreed now I just assume big government will bail out the companies who made bad choices
I’m in the midst of this Greedy nightmare myself. No contingencies, negotiations, 20+ bids, if your lucky. All you’ve ever saved must go towards homes that most are NOT WORTH WHAT YOU’LL PAY FOR IT.
If my newest bid doesn’t get accepted, my middle aged self will have to return to live with my elderly parent!!!!! Buying up every bit of beautiful lands is horrible too!
Poh Philippi got ok I d
Trump "fixing" NAFTA, his dumb dumb trade war, and the prices of lumber tripling because of it, is the problem. They don't even address this fact in this clip. It's the reason people are cancelling new builds, and looking for preowned homes.
"....homes that most are NOT WORTH WHAT YOU’LL PAY FOR IT."
It's all about location. It's the market the determines the worth of a home.
@@hurkamur1 your way off base.
@@jaquesstrappe7664 Bought a house, had a kid, gained prosperity. He certainly didn't f*ck the housing market a-la Bush.
Shoutout to the 27 year olds living with their parents like meeeee!
Lucky. You get to save money
@@erikprestonTV is it lucky though
30 and annoyingly still looking. Every house I see with a sign that goes up is already sold before I even get a call back from the realtor.
Shout out to my fam for dealing with me for more than the 3 months I told them I'd be home.
How long will it take you to save up $40,000? That's 20% down on a $200,000 place. Living at home, you should be able to sock away $10,000 a year, at least, if you work at it. And there are special deals for first-time home buyers and vets that get you in for less than 20%. You'll have to buy mortgage insurance if you're not a vet, but you can get into a place, if you work hard at it.
@@erikprestonTV Yup. My little sister did that, and then Dad willed her the house! I had to make my own way, and eventually cashed in some retirement to make my first home purchase. With the rapid appreciation on the property, it's turned out very well. $100,000 for the $60,000 I sacrificed.
I'm a gen X'r whose been responsible, always worked, thrifty, maybe even a tightwad, and if I ever can afford to buy a home it will be a miracle.
SAME - went to college, paid of my loans, saving for a starthome - every time i look at the down payment I realize it will outpace my deposit faster than I can save it.
@@leborhal7450 same, only difference is I had a VA loan available after putting 8 years in USMC. Even then it was tough for many years.
Wait 2 years. This isn't sustainable.
Hmmm, I am also a gen Xer. Saved enough money, during 2008, and bought a home. Worked full time and full time school, so I didn’t have student debt. Struggle is life.
@@foreign_agent Come to watertown, NY. Good sized houses here are only 50-150K!
We own a house in a major Texas city. Our tax appraisal last year was $225k. This year, it’s nearly $275k. That’s a 22% increase in one year.
I live in Houston (Harris County). I believe we are capped at 10% increase per year by law. You might want to look into if that applies to you and contest the rise.
Dude, that is soooo cheap compared to the coastal regions. That is why everyone is moving to Texas.
Wow!
@@andrewreisinger6860 Tax appraisal isn't market value. I've seen houses appraised at around $250k which were easily worth a million or two because they were giant mansions on sprawling estates. It's called corruption.
Appraisal values should reflect market values and tax rates lowered. I'm sure your market value is still much higher.
Yep, we looked for a couple months and ran into this day after day. Houses either disappeared almost immediately or they were asking way over what the house would appraise at. A lot of these same houses we would see later listed as rentals. It’s really sad.
American dream is a mirage.
@@golondriz3 It's not a mirage it's just harder to achieve than ever
@A M You'd better take another look. A mid one bed apt in portland, freeport, brunswick, etc. Is about $1,500 (and just like SoCA, they also have very high prices rentals) That is precisely the mid same in Los Angeles county. Moreover, Maine is exploiting middle class to subsidizes lower class housing. So you will see a lot of 1 bed apt for $6-900, but they are reserved for section 8ers. Property management firms control the property and inflate rent because Maine allows it.
@A M I suppose it is to those that aren't capable of achieving anything. If you're smart about where you spend your energy, you can definitely still build wealth and be successful. Why do you think otherwise?
@A M That felt explosive. We obviously don't live in a meritocracy and some have it better than others by design or by chance. I'm not aware of any other system where this isn't the case. Sounds like my interpretation of what the American dream is just different from yours. We're obviously on a sinking ship here competing against each other for scraps, just have to be more resourceful now than ever to build any kind of wealth
"The housing market is hot, especially for the upper middle class"
Dude, owning any home at all IS upper middle class at this point.
A house in the Oakland, Ca area just went for 1 million over asking price. I am in Charleston, SC houses are going for 30 to 40 thousand over asking with many cash offers in 1 to 2 days
Amen
Master's degrees pay off, kid. You should invest in yourself above all else!
@@letsgobrandon3928 But who wants to move to South Carolina?
Santa Rosa, CA resident here and my neighbor and good friend of 20+ years just sold her modest 1,640 sq. ft. track house for 800K, which was 50K over the asking price. She had 8 offers, 6 over listing price and 2 cash bids; several of the non-cash bids were higher than 800k. Our neighborhood has been evacuated several times over the last 4 years due to wild fires, too. And It's equally crazy that the home she bought in Portland, OR 14 months ago has already appreciated 85K according to the company she's refinancing with.
I live in a small town in Utah. A friend wanted to purchase a building lot in a subdivision nearby. He found all the lots were owned by a Chinese real estate investment company and they weren’t selling.
Yep. The Chinese are one of the main reasons why property on the west coast has become unaffordable as they are buying EVERYTHING.
Moving back to Utah after 2 years its hard to grasp how expensive it is just in that little time
and....
It should be illegal for foreign investment firms to buy residential property in the United States.
No wonder I'm being bombarded with callers and letters in the mail asking if I'd like to sell my home with zero fees or cost. In the past four years homes in my neighborhood have gone up 40%.
Hello Bella
How are you doing? Hope you and your family are safe
I get one per day almost...at least 3 per week....
Every day. The house three door down is selling for $50,000 above what it was sold for two years ago and they are taking offers. 600 square feet no yard no off street parking....crazy.
Do it now, rent an apartment to wait out the crash, then buy in again right after the crash.
Yep! Had a guy call me for condo i sold 6 years ago!
This piece left a knot in my stomach. I feel like the vail has been lifted. My fiancé and I have been looking for a home when the pandemic started. The exact same thing happened to us with several houses we put offers in on. Cash buyers going 20-30k over asking. We found a home in late 2020 and still paid 5k over asking. We got lucky that our realtor knew the sellers realtor. If it hadn’t been for that connection we’d still be looking for a home.
I figured the market was growing organically as Krystal pointed out, but never considered this is just another “position play” by the street. It’s sickening to think the value of my house is artificially increased by 15% and when the street gets tired of playing landlord cash in their chips. I’d imagine the time it will take my fiancé and I to recover that 15% will be met potentially when we are ready to sell the house in 15-20 years and hopefully we’ll break even by then.
I recently offered a piece of land I have for sale and had 50 offers in ONE day! And the price was just what I had in it, I was not looking for big profits. My home is 7 years old and I have ppl calling and knocking wanting to give me 50% more than what I paid for it. Crazy!! I went thru the bubble in 2008 and that property lost 50% of its value, not doing that again. I am happy to see you got something before it went totally insane!!
I got LUCKY buying mine. I happened to get into a good position where a friend of mine was selling her home and sold it to me exclusively. I also sold my condo and made a good chunk of change which helped a lot. Even with my perks it was a nightmare
Don’t stress too much, as long as you plan to live in the home for a while you will be fine. Your payment will not change if you used a fixed rate mortgage and ideally your incomes will grow over time so that you will be paying the mortgage with inflated dollars. In ten years you won’t want to sell because the payment will feel so low. Fluctuations in the market shouldn’t affect you in the near term and in the long term most real estate is not very volatile, you’re going to be fine :)
@@bblanco9698 Makes sense! Great way to put things into perspective. I can slowly back away from the ledge. Lol.
@@Bdukes90 glad that helped!
We need a law restricting residential housing purchases before corporations own them all.
@@Dan0TheMano it’s home owners more than anything. Anyone who already owns has all the incentive to make sure property values keep increasing 🙁
they'll just find some legal fronts....
@@maxpower8429 yes, to an extent. In my state of CA, 50% of households own the residence they are living in.
You will own nothing.. and you will be happy- The Great Reset
What is the great reset?
@@joeyp12788 The Great Reset is the name of the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF), held in June 2020. It brought together high-profile business and political leaders, convened by Charles, Prince of Wales and the WEF, with the theme of rebuilding society and the economy.
One thing Krystal said that bugged me even more was...when things go south, who are they going to bail out? Probably the greedy pension fund/hedge fund groups like before.
Immigrants
Far worse...the big institutions will be bailed out by pouring in yet more of our money, or what’s left of it, to revive the economy. And when that money is returned with interest, the Govt keeps that for itself. Talking about duping the junta
It's happening in Canada too. Counties won't let you build a small house because the tax bill is too small. There's no way into the market for regular people.
that is insane is this true?
@@TheMrgoodmanners It's not explicitly stated, but, there are no new builds in rural areas that have small footprints.
Houses used to be homes - NOW - it's an investment.
Homes have always been the greatest investment.
It’s disgusting. Just like someone treating bread as investment and raising its price - they are killing ppls necessities
Personal home is a liability, not an investment. You are not getting any return on it. The concept you will gain equity years down the road is flawed logic. You will pay 3 times what you paid for it just in interest. Then then their is the thousands in property tax you will pay every year. Then there is the maintenance and up keep. Houses are only investments when you buy them to rent out to tenants. Then it becomes an investment.
@@johnlyn1 if you want to spend your resources chasing inflation, that is your CHOICE! Just please don't breed if you do.
@FrankFit not at all look up Robert Schiller’s research. Homes rarely beat inflation over the long term. I’m a professional investor and a bought my first home as a college student.
Great Reporting. This is NEWS that needs to be out there! 👍🏾
i bought housing for my children in the 1990's, thinking that housing was going to go through the roof. Instead prices gone through the stratosphere. Now their husbands are very nice to me.
bless your heart
They better be!!!
Wow what a great dad
...ok???
Smart Daddy! Lol😊
Well said. I've given up on even hoping to buy a home. I'm almost 27. 30 years ago when my parents were my age, they bought a home almost exactly like the one at the beginning of this video, but about 50% bigger, in the suburbs of Nashville, TN for $11k (about $30k adjusted for inflation). That house sold a couple of years ago for $600,000. There are tons of places to rent here of all sizes. I had no trouble finding a small townhouse to rent. But unless the economy completely restarts, I'll never own a home. And it's not something that one needs to have a good life. But when you go to college, have a decent job in healthcare and don't live beyond your means, in the US you're supposed to be able to afford to own a home. But there is no American dream anymore.
Hello Elizabeth
How are you doing? Hope you and your family are safe
Work hard save money simple
you can buy a home, but i know you mean, a home in your desired town. why are people so against going somewhere else ? theres still plenty houses in the midwest. its a shame most of us have to give up on on places like CA/Seattle/NYC but you can still have your own home, just not in your favorite place.
@@jjohnson8977 you can save when everything has an inflated price tag. I'm waiting to be charged just for breathing air
Look into the rural areas of TN. I see homes in rural areas of most states for under 200k, even under 100k where you're not so close to your neighbor that you can see inside his windows. There are homes with plenty of land in the country in my state going for 80-100k.
Wood for construction is going crazy as well
Blame the governments they shut down everything.
180% increases to date over the last year. F'n crazy. And they say inflation isn't real.
@@johndakota1165 blame the people that made the government shutdown go 12 month longer than it should have
First intelligent remark here sir
rising fuel costs thanks to Biden and friends makes the costs of transporting ALL goods proportionally.
I'm a renter finding it absolutely impossible to find anything worth what's being asked for or within a reasonable budget 🙄
Have you considered relocating to a market that is less competitive but still offers decent quality of life? Sometimes we must think outside the box and make major changes in order to achieve our goals, and if time is not on your side then the only option is to open up the decision space to consider more options. With many jobs being remote these days, people can often pick and choose any community to live, and take their remote job with them. That said, I agree the housing crisis is real and is already happening, with many folks earning sub-middle class incomes feeling the rising cost burden of rent. Unfortunately, rent only goes up.
@First Last There are plenty of countries where home ownership is not even an option, due to corruption, crime, lack of economic opportunity and so on. Fortunately, the US is a country where property ownership is attainable if one is willing to put in the time and hard work to save even a modest amount of capital. The home ownership system in this country might not be perfect but it works rather well for a large enough number of people. If it does not work for a given individual, the first place to look might be in the mirror.
@First Last I can agree with that. Home ownership is fundamental to national identity in the US as a mark of success, and is etched into the social consciousness. It is part of the American Dream. As to reasons for comparison, it is simple: most immigrants do come to the US from 3rd world countries. They therefore feel that they owe it to themselves and their family to 'make it', and you don't make it here until you have something to show for it. What better than a house to be able to say, 'this is mine.' Hard to top that as a symbol of success. And as with anything, where there is strong inflexible demand, there will be supply at all costs, fraud, scams, and hustlers taking advantage of the unsuspecting consumer. Buyer beware.
I'm in the same boat.
@@foreign_agent Agree! That's exactly what I had to do. I found a beautiful place 2 months ago. Thank you! Sorry for the late reply. My notifications were off 🙄🤣
This house is not an outlier, this Situation is happening everyday. I work in real estate this is real
Same. stuff is crazy here in the Austin market
Same here, demand far outstrips supply. People are bidding like crazy for subpar listings. The price of lumber is driving new construction prices through the roof and contractors won't build affordable housing because there is no profit in it.
It’s so real. I just bought a home and it’s very wild out there.
Here in VA is horrible, normal middle-class people with not thousands in the bank do not have a chance, sad but true!!
What's going to happen when mortgage forbearance expires after June 30?
I'm thinking its time for young people to just pool our money together, buy a big plot of land somewhere where land is hella cheap, and create our own city that we can actually afford to live in.
Sounds like a commune.
It’s called Campers and school bus living. Looks cool but more work than a house.
I’ve been stressing this for years...I’ve been saying it’s time for millennials to take over these cities cause these old heads are running it into the ground
@@businessuser632 Age has nothing to do with it. It's a mindset devoid of true values that's doing it. All of us are guilty of that here and there. The people you're trying to describe wallow in it.
Sign my family up
My wife and I are in our 40s. Have a single child going into college in the fall.
We sold our home 3 years ago and rented so we can move out of NYC when she graduates.
Well the time has come and now we get outbid on every home. Our landlord is moving back into our current rental.
Now we are packing up to live with my parents.
We have plenty of money in the bank and both have jobs.
I’m not paying $170k over list price.
Your opportunity to buy will come soon. I was estimating this bubble burst by the 4Q 2021 or by 1Q 2022but the prices keep on climbing at an alarming rate. I think it’s going to pop by summer-fall this year 2Q 2021. Stay the course, don’t buy just yet!
@@THEECATGUY good point and I agree. My wife and I will just wait it out ! We are in no rush.
@@steved1880 sadly you should wait it out instead of possibly being upside down on a mortgage that is over priced for the house. It's going to take time and patience but never stop looking, yet, better lock in your rent amount too. Good luck!
@@THEECATGUY the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent, I largely agree but add two more years and stop talking about quarters.
You are lucky to have this option
Well it's already happened here in Australia and everything you said is spot on.
it's in australia too? I heard that Australia and China real estate is owned by chinese?
@@obamabinladen5055 possibly, we just have a lot of greedy mega investors and a government that refuse to regulate. Plus they sold off most public housing and many lower cost rentals are now being used as air bnb so the cost of renting has skyrocketed.
@@MsDidi38 insane. we're heading towards techno-feudalism.Get your own little corner of peace before things solidify.
Rent is also Skyrocketing so the renter class not only cannot buy but are unable to rent what they need or are forced to downgrade.
or split rent 3 ways with 3 good wage earners...
@@markbrownner6565 my parents are from India but I was born and raised in the US. In Indian culture in America we have this slang term called the "pind lifestyle." The "pind lifestyle" refers to a bunch of Indian people in America who are usually poor that all live together. It could be 2-3 families or even more that live in one house together to survive. It's pretty sad that we could see this "pind lifestyle" apply to Americans that are non-indian. I'm one that doesn't believe it could work for non-indians due to American cultural-ism.
@@doctorx1924 it's a very typical immigrant story... live together pool resources get ahead... irsh jews italians russians etc
@@markbrownner6565 agreed it works for immigrants but I can't see regular people who are born and raised in this country being able to do it.
@@doctorx1924 try appalachia with multi-generational homes
It's not like this in California - we've been seeing a TON of cheap starter homes going up absolutely everywhere. I even see a lot of newly built, affordable beach front starter homes down in L.A., to accommodate the younger generations. They are called "tents".
Jeez man, you had me ropped in, thinking really, great etc UNTIL THE LAST SENTENCE! haha but tragic.
Nice
@@douglasrobertson1330 me too!, lol
Why do you think they push tiny homes and van living. Cause that is all you can afford.
😂
This is very disturbing! The greed is out of control! I hope everyone who is currently bidding eventually finds a beautiful home that they love!!
Thank you
You're funny.
what about the Casual levels of greed for the last 70 years of the middle class and the poor?
because if you haven't noticed inflation happens because of government decisions and programs.
and when 70% of your taxes are literally paying to buy votes from different groups of people.
welfare Social Security other entitlement programs.
essentially the reason the inflation goes up. is because of the poor.
the taxman knows I can only take so much from the rich. so the politician knows they'll be thrown out of office if they up to taxes on the middle class on the poor.
so they just inflate the dollar to pay the bills that the middle class and the poor don't want to pay.
so who's really greedy?
Why rushing into getting a home at this time. There are too much unknown with this crazy market. Get your house after the crash if you still have a job...
All humans are greedy, especially the broke ones. The poorer a person becomes, the more desperate and greedy they are. If you were at the top with millions of dollars of homes, you would do the EXACT. SAME. THING.
@@tinchauea this isn't really a housing bubble in the usual way. because people are simply investing their money currently because interest rates are low.
but inflations about to hit when the pandemic ends. when that happens house prices may go down a little but they're still going to be way higher than they are now.
so it's really about people putting their money into something finite that will increase with inflation.
for example I bought a house for $50,000 in 2005. That house is now worth150 to 200k.
so at this point you're kind of gambling with your money when you consider inflation.
if you don't invest into something before inflation hits.
then you can calculate the margin of money you're going to lose out of every dollar you have.
and in the last year between both administrations they printed something like 40% of the entire money that ever existed in America.
so while you may be able to find something perhaps cheap 4 or 5 Years From now..
there's also the good chance that you're just pissing away money on rent.
That's why I suggest people get a van and a gym membership.
Thank you for reporting on this. I've seen it happening like crazy in Tuscon. I asked people moving out of homes they rented from individuals, and they said their previous landlords sold to a company in California.
Dang. So it's not just us. I live in Idaho and we're having the same exact issues. It's really sad actually.
It’s happening (apart from a few exemptions) through the country here in Washington state an hour away from Seattle (without traffic) mobile homes go for 450,000 I know this because 5 of my siblings are trying to buy homes and my dad with my brother our building 2 houses
East Tennessee Mountains here, I look at the listings every morning and they're under contract by afternoon! $200,000 and still needs TLC
@@heatherlove6906 thats all the northeast and west coast folks buy cash with their home sales profit. In my area in TX same thing.
It’s everywhere. Middle of nowhere locations have homes being priced waaaaaay too high.
It’ll crash soon enough. Just watch.
I'm in Washington and it's the same over here... It's horrible and a true crime.
"Compound interest is the most powerful force in the universe."
- Albert Einstein
Only if the interest that's compounding exceeds the rate of inflation...
Inflation is negative compound interest
I can't wait til I own my first home. Mow my own lawn, tend a garden, have a place to tinker on cars, paint a room however I want, etc. One day...
Save your money. When the bubble bursts & foreclosures start you will b in good position to buy something
@@ronskancke8166 that is what I plan on doing, hopefully in the next 2 years.
You know. There’s other ways to obtaining a home. You can buy in a rural area that offers zero down loans. Live in it for a year then sell and use the proceeds to upgrade to something you actually want. It’s not hard. Your just over analyzing how to do it.
Good luck growing a garden, criminalizing growing your own food has already started in Croatia. Look it up. True story. NOT a conspiracy and I've read this would happen over 16 years ago. ALL part of the global elites evil plan. you'll own NOTHING and you'll like it. BS.
@@coloringkarma2 good to see people are doing their homework. If only more people were awake to this fact.
"You will own nothing and you will be happy" - World Economic Forum
Ugh... Yes this is what it seems like. I'm a Realtor® and it breaks my heart to see this happening. People are creating a situation that isn't going to be good in the end.
People in the U.S. will slowly be squeezed into renting and urban environments. Why aren't we seeing a huge push to supplement home owners will green energy production they can generate for themselves such as solar paneling? There should be panels on every single U.S. home and those in power pushing the green energy and who support the coming carbon penalties should be doing everything they can to see that homes are generating as much of their own clean energy as possible, yet that isn't happening and is being ignored. It's pretty fishy.
"The Usual Suspects Again"! There is no stopping this. My family will survive this but the housing collapse to come will affect everyone!
@@Dan0TheMano what will be the catalyst?
@@PhilOrth if history repeats itself, it will be the wave of the housing market flooded with homes that people cannot afford to make the payments, foreclosures, bankruptcy, and the banks refusing to give those massive loans for overinflated prices... supply and demand.
If anyone got the announcement from the Biden administration today it looks like the government is planning to bail out "home owners" by allowing them to stretch their mortgage by up to 40 years. And allowing you to go into forbearance right after purchase.
@@anniesshenanigans3815 but this time around you aren’t seeing ARM’s as the vast majority are fixed rates and there are stricter and more verified DTI’s. So while homes are inflated, qualified borrowers are buying them and even if values drop, the owners will continue to be able to make their payments. What I’m seeing in my market (Phoenix) is that the inventory is sooo low because these institutions are scooping anything and everything up and paired with a large influx of out of state buyers leaving California and other states, it makes for a blood bath of competition when a house hits the market. I just don’t see how there could be a huge crash (at least in my market) other than if the institutional investors dumped their entire pool of homes and jacked the supply up. But why would they do that? I don’t know, I’m just an average joe who is trying to make sense of everything and also been on and off of trying to find a home after selling mine 6 months ago to take my equity out with the thought that the market would drop when it’s only gone up.
@@anniesshenanigans3815 and guess who will gobble up the cheap foreclosures and hold them until the market turns around? The same f*ckers that are buying homes in bulk now.
We're turning into a feudal state.
16 years in the military and I know that I will never be able to buy a house or property in the country I defended. Your welcome!
It's criminal!
Thank you, global elites who are not Americans but are running America including our amazing military. They have stabbed Americans in the back snd are now done with us and you...
if you are a vet or active duty, then you should be able to qualify for the va home loan, you may have buy in an area that's affordable but it's possible.
@@briandawkins1770 I have VA loan less than 4% interest and live on less than 80k per year with savings in the bank. All it takes is moving to a place where deplorables live. I love it.
16 years of BAH and the ability to use the VA loan along with constantly being stationed in areas with guaranteed paying tenants (military) and you never bought a house? Hardly seems like anyone's fault but yours.
It's so overwhelming to see this happen to the younger generations. It's almost as if they shouldn't even bother trying. It's like a giant strangling a toddler into submission, refusing to let up. The older generations have literally destroyed this country with their greed.
It's the J that has done this.
Don’t blame the older generations for something the federal government is responsible for. These young people like big government, and now they’re getting squashed by it.
@@billbillson5082 Young people like regulation, so this doesn't happen ya dingbat.
@@billbillson5082 It's the lack of government involvement in this that has allowed these shell companies to do this.
@@sarahdohring1551 - wrong.
Government mandated sub prime lending..amongst a host of other things.
Combined with ballooning deficits and non stop printing of money, you get what you get.
There are consequences to being 30 TRILLION in debt and pumping money no nstop. Regulation? When is the last time dc effectively regulated anything 😂 they can’t even balance a budget
I lost my house in 08 and hated life but guess what I just realized? This year would have been 30 years and that house would been mine. I'm glad my father died before we lost the house cuz he didn't have to see what he worked for his whole life get taken away from us.
I have been reading the comments and I am shocked. I think that Rising should dedicate a segment or two every week with experts discussing this issue.
I’m watching young engineers get locked out of the housing market. It’s insane. How many people are we going to lock out before we do something about real estate speculation?
My partner and I make 175k a year. We’ve been priced out here in San Diego.
I'm a young engineer and expect to be able to afford a decent starter home in the current market by my late 20's (well, 20%). No gift money or unfair advantages. My job doesn't pay amazing or anything either (it's good, just not great by engineering standards). Real estate prices are very high for my state and being on the west coast just makes it more expensive. Still, just sticking to a budget and good planning go a very long way. Especially helpful to look for side income sources. If I had dual income it would be far more achievable as well
My family bought a house in central Coeur d’Alene, ID in 2012 and it has QUADRUPLED! We don’t feel good about it tho because we know we can’t sell it. Where would we go? Pay half a million for another house? This hurts everyone who isn’t rich. Even if you own a home, you still feel trapped.
Learn another language and buy a house in eastern europe or latin america for a small fraction of the price
@@joanfrederick9176 Even if you own your home your property tax and insurance can go up if the value of your house increases.
I agree . Even if you want to sell and move somewhere else or downsize , you can`t .
@@smokedbeefandcheese4144 I mean it’s a great place and I don’t plan to move, but it’s one thing being where you want to be and always being able to move if an opportunity comes up. It’s quite another when you know you are locked into where you’re at (like it or not, you ain’t moving).
@YankeeSpirit I am multi lingual and that doesn’t make me feel any better. I wouldn’t mind owning a house in Latin America, but I don’t want to be far from family all the time.
My point here was that the housing hyperinflation affects everyone - home owners or renters. We are all stuck in place.
I’m in cda as well! I know a lot of average people around here who have sold their homes for great returns and I’m super happy for them. Unfortunately like a lot of people here in my age group (young millennial locals) I feel I’m getting squeezed out. I know so many people who are getting kicked out of their rentals even as the landlords either want to sell or raise rent $500 more a month. The housing in cda just can’t keep up as well as the wages.
Wow, it really wasn't a surprise to see the villains behind the next housing crisis. Why must we continue to repeat history. By the way, this was a great coverage. Thank you.
It’s bs. This report looks at only small geographical areas in this country to skew the numbers to make their point that “rich people are evil”. Suburban and urban housing prices are always in a constant bubble then burst pattern due to the constant changes in demand for that housing. Of course, the average person doesn’t know this so vids like this can brainwash you into thinking there’s some evil plot happening when in fact it’s just the normal flow of business in the real estate world.
@@acedeadeye2052 no BS. Anyone with half a brain can see there is something desperately wrong with the housing market. I knew we were in trouble when 2 years ago I saw home builders offering zero down homes. I said, look, it’s starting again, the same nonsense that led to 2008. Then you add in the “cash offer” weirdness. The only part that is truly bizarre is, why on earth would investors buy at the top of the market? From an investment standpoint, that sounds like exactly what you shouldn’t do. What’s the full story? Add to that even places like nowhere Iowa is seeing price inflation. Missoula Montana too. Virtually anywhere you look, the prices are inflated. It is NOT select markets. It’s nationwide. And from what I’m seeing from others in Europe and Australia, same thing there. Something is going on. Not sure what exactly. I don’t think this program really explained it all.
@@acedeadeye2052 actually, rich people are evil.
@@atenrok really? And your evidence to this statement is what exactly?
@@acedeadeye2052 basically, the entire recorded history of mankind + my personal experience 💁🏻♂️
Norwegian here. Here you pay 40% in taxes when you sell your second home.
You are free to sell the house you live in, but you need to have lived there for two years if you also own more than one house.
Same in the US. You have to live there for two years to avoid tax on gains.
@@soyouthought8231 Too bad Americans have have same rule - you have to live in a house for two years to avoid tax on house value appreciation.
@@soyouthought8231 Fine, but my close friend in Denmark tells me the same thing is happening there. Home prices are through the roof. The central bank in Denmark has also suppressed interest rates. People, the central banks are causing this! (Financial suppression, i.e., deliberately suppressing interest rates to force investors into assets.)
Wrong. One year, or you need to pay tax - if you have made money when selling - after one year there is no tax. However in norway you still need two high incomes to afford to buy a house. There is a reason why birth rates are dropping here, only a few can afford children these days.
@X ennial The part where you have to live in a house for two years in the US, otherwise there is tax?
This is so disgusting. These pension funds and hedge funds are so greedy 🤢
Welcome to the side effects from a poorly regulated country.
What I find so funny is. The HUGE prices are in Markets that the most popular places to live.
Just have your money ready when the bottom falls out. We are definitely in a bubble. I missed out in 08. I'm going to be all in this go around.
@@scottieflamingo718 But im worried if i stack cash will it be worthless due to hyperinflation. Any general advice?
Pension funds are not greedy. They are trying to insure that their beneficiaries have a stable retirement. Hedge funds are greedy.
The housing is insane in LA right now. Housing was already insane here - but a house that was going for $650K now easily goes for over $1,000,000. It's unreal.
It’s called record low interest rates... lower rates mean you can buy more house for a lower payment. With all the buyers wanting to buy now due to the lower interest it drives the price up.
@@vintagejeep also some that would sell at these prices are staying put because no one with a family wants to move during corona
Happening here in the PDX area too.
@Bald Eagle think that's why they've been moving to Portland lately
Ryan Dodgson nope, just supply and demand. Prices have been rising all over CA since 2011 and have not really flattened or decreased.
I am surprised no one is talking about the increase in property taxes because of the increase in property value.
I clean pools in Florida. Houses are being sold/bought/built left and right. It’s nuts
I've been thinking about moving to Florida because I can work remotely now However, the Florida prices are increasing at a rate that I cannot accept. It is not a good time to buy.
I clean pools in Rodanthe, NC. Its getting to a point here were businesses are suffering because there is no where for working class people to live. Everything is a weekly rental or air bnb. Its a living nightmare
Silas Zebedee market is absurd right now. Dumps are sooo overpriced selling like hot cakes. Bad time to buy
That "dilapidated" Maryland house will be upgraded to the level of a hovel, then flipped for $1,000,000.
@@wackkawack6640 What they do is build and entire new home around the old structure. So they will build a 4,000 square ft home around that old house. Very common in the DMV (DC, Maryland, Virginia) area.
No upgrade. Buyers just wanted the lot.
They'll tear it down and rebuild a new home OR fix it just enough to look like all the home cable shows and sell it for a profit. The thing is, the neighborhood will determine if that works or not. I grew up outside of DC. THere are areas in MD I would not move to if you paid me to live there. Outsiders don't know this and many have taken a loss thinking they could flip it after fixing a house up. Nope. The house has good bones...will be intersting to see what happens to it.
Almost like "the great reset" is happening around us... Wait that's just a conspiracy theory, right.
idk what that means, but this is just part of the logic of capitalism. The more consolidation, the more power, and the more exploitation that can be carried out. I don't think it's a conspiracy that it's in the interest of the elite to buy everyone else out of house and home and raise rents
@@Gerg1n8eR He meant the World Economic Forum's 'Great Reset' plan for the next decade, which ironically is an organization of exactly the types of powerful people you just described :)
@@Gerg1n8eR - if you think this is a result of capitalism you’re mistaken.
A federal government that is 30 trillion in debt, and continuing to print and spend at atrocious levels is not capitalist or free market in any sense of the word.
Capitalism requires one to balance a budget or else you go into debt and your life’s work gets sold to the highest bidder.
@@billbillson5082 It's not a free market, and I'll grant you that there is a difference between the status quo and your libertarian ideal, but it is still capitalist. The economy is made up of private companies in private hands. Yes, the government spends money, but still those companies are in private hands. And then there's the part where the government spending overwhelmingly goes to either the finance sector -- capitalists, the military industrial complex -- capitalists, social spending -- ends up with landlords and local businesses aka capitalists, healthcare/pharma/insurance -- capitalists, and so on. So the spending is at the behest of capitalism, because government policy is set by the donors of politicians -- capitalists.
So when you say "this can't be capitalism because the government spends money" please understand that I don't believe you after I look at the government and see all this.
What I do believe is that your capitalist ideal is not the only true capitalism like you claim, but is instead a subset of capitalism. Call it "Libertarian Capitalism" or "Free Market Absolutist Capitalism" or something to differentiate it, but I suspect that you'll have little luck redefining terms people already use.
@@Gerg1n8eR ok so what’s your solution?
Thats my fear Im 31 single income house (wife is a stay at home mom) I don't think I will ever be able to afford a home. It just keeps getting more and more expensive and we just can't keep up.
It can only end with extreme deflation. Be patient, keep an immaculate credit score and the banks will be begging for people to take these houses off their hands
Eventually “we will own nothing and be happy”. World Economic Forum. They want everyone to be renting from the government, just like in communist Russia and China.
You're just four paychecks away from foreclosure.....
Appreciate your wisdom Frank. Thanks.
Oh man I hope so. It's awfully hard to see an end in sight, but I keep telling myself nothing is permanent
@@rebelwithacause5217 In our dreams we could be so lucky. The truth is that it's the wealthy elite are F'n our collective holes. We the people don't stand a chance. They own the media their taking heads keep us divided. All this, so as to have someone to hate or complain about. All this so we can't see how we are being F'd. Hate the liberal, hate the conservative, the wealthy elite don't care. They want you to hate the other so that they can rob us all and get away with it. The fools will die with their last breath damming the wrong entity. There are few true faith Republicans, there are some true faith Democrats. The rest democracy
Just wait till you see how much inventory there will be this summer/fall when forbearance ends. For everyone feeling FOMO, don't buy a house now. You'll owe more than your house is worth in 6 months
Biden is going to keep pushing out forbearance. He doesn't want to look bad so he'd rather the problem get worse and let the next admin deal with it.
Bla bla bla....all the republicans have been saying this since 2013
Biden has already proposed a max extension of 40 years on your mortgage
They are already modifying loans to add the missing payments to the back end of the loan. Also, Biden has proposed current homeowners who are behind can extend to 40 year mortage.
Tbh I hope this happens I want to buy but I'm not doing this bidding war thing I'll live in a camper first
My wife and I are 34 living in the Philadelphia suburbs. This video summarizes our attempt to purchase a home perfectly. The values are so inflated in our area for a single family home that we’ve basically given up for the time being
buy land
I've watched friends break down over this and completely given up on ever getting my own home myself in my home state or even the US. I hear ya.
Smart move, you may have to wait a few years but you will get a bargain at some point.
Depends on where you buy. Im Moving to El Paso Texas from Denver Co where homes are still very affordable. Here in Denver its also getting very insanely expensive. All homes now are half a million dollars or more.
@H H exactly what they said. i was looking for a single home to buy. i put in couple offers. price is pretty good ,but still got out bidden by other buyers
Where do these people go, when they can’t afford the home or rent. This makes me so upset just down right sick to my stomach, families are being torn apart. Many of these people don’t know where the next meal is coming from.
This is happening here in Austin, Tx. Families are getting outbid left and right. It’s so hard to get a home around here, even in the outer suburbs.
Is rent at least still affordable for a single person, or is that getting ridiculous too
@dearnaomi How much on average for a one bedroom studio in a decent area? Or even how much usually just for someone to get an airbnb by themselves for a few months?
What about new build homes? Is that better than buying existing home?
Texas makes sense however, we do have a good system here.
Austin is the problem of texas because its growing too fast and all these houses are overpriced and only people with money win them and then the areas become too wealthy and with a single recession, this becomes a problem.
If everything is too high, the taxes dont come back down so youll still have your payments plus the steady increasing taxes.
@@homehere9817 lumber prices have gone up astronomically over the past year. Between COVID shutting down mills and various disasters last year, supply is at an all time low. Plus a lot of folk had spare time at home and a few projects to work on so demand spiked during early COVID. I've been told the cost to build a new modest sized 3/2 has increased by $35-$45k just since last year. Plus, due to social distancing, contractors can't work as fast. Add to this the lack of folks working construction and we have a massive problem for building new.
I tried to purchase a home with what I thought a good down payment, a plus credit and having longevity in a career would get you. Now I'm binge watching van life videos.
@@afdband1 I hope you find peace.
It's rough. At least your credentials aren't making it harder for you. That's at least good.
@@afdband1 ???
Nothing wrong with vans or boats. No rent means being able to save.
Homes in FL are selling like hot cakes. They sell less than 1 day being on the market. This is not sustainable.
This is throughout the U.S. every state.
Homes in California ( Irvine ) gets sold 4 hours before being put on market
@Matt L Nope. I’m building a tiny home for $50k
Yes, because not many are selling. This is fake news.
Mathew do you know what area is selling like hot bakes?
You think houses are selling for more than what they are worth?
What's going on should not be legal. Making renters out of all of us should not be acceptable to either party. We need legislation to prevent these entities from screwing with us in yet one more way.
40% profit Saagar? I bought my home for $155k in the mid 1990s. It’s a 1920s 3/2 in a (now) upscale area, and it hasn’t been significantly updated since 1930. Recent Zillow value is $470k, but bids would be 25% higher. That’s insane. I could never afford this neighborhood if I were starting my career today!
Thats why it hurts the younger millennials so much who want to start a new family. When people bash on that generation, they dont understand that the days of affordable housing is gone.
Relatively same scenario here. Bought our house brand new in 2006 for $160k and realtor estimates are around $265k. Not quite as big of a jump as you, but I just imagine trying to move and realizing we would be paying more money for less house if we did 😂
👍🏼 $155k in 1995 is $267.5k in 2021 dollars ... not counting interest ... keep appreciating every real dollar of appreciation you get. Dad pun out!
Here in Pittsburgh, entire neighborhoods of brick row homes in the east end that were sold for $25-35k 20 years ago, are now being sold for $300-400k now...it's ridiculous.
Don’t you wish you bought a couple lol
SF Bay Area. Just closed a deal for $1.35M fir 1st time homebuyers. I'm a,loan officer. I despise these markets. Used to help people buy homes for $500k. Can't get a condo for that. It's the have & have nots. Tech workers In companies earn stock so they become wealthy.
In Hungary, this happens too. It’s global.
Fox: Cnn’s fake news
Cnn: Fox’s fake news
the hill: lets talk about millennial issues
Well said!
This is not a millennial issue. This is an existential issue.
The truth: this is a class issue and class warfare. Don't let anyone, not even The Hill, divide us into groups and start us pointing the finger at each other. Personally, I don't know any people in any ethnic or age group (millennial or otherwise) who have $900,000 lying around to purchase a house for cash at 25% above an already hyper-inflated market value. Do you? Krystal, on the other hand, is worth $44 million, and while I respect the fact that she is willing to report on issues like this, she is affected by none of it.
That’s part of what I love about rising, they talk about real issues that really effect people instead of the partisan tribal bs
Janet Yellen said her one regret as Fed chair was not raising your cost of living higher.... Wonder how many times the major new sources mentioned that over Gender Pronouns... Yep, they got us right where they want us....
Live in Boise and it's absolutely insane. I've been saving for 4 years and have been completely priced out. I'd move back to Texas if my kids didn't live here with my ex. Our real estate market is ridiculous for years now. Thank you Californians!!
Same in nevada
I'm not surprised. I've heard that the housing market in Boise in particular is really bad right now. People are fleeing expensive west coast cities and driving up prices in Boise.
@@97I30T to call it a housing crisis is not a stretch. It's unlike anything I've ever seen in my life having lived in 4 diff states
@@gooberstankable It is a crisis! I live in Kansas City and it is much the same here. I had a friend offer $40k over asking price for an ordinary starter house in a suburb of KC and she still got outbid. Something has to give. This is not sustainable long term.
@@97I30T I believe it's sustainable. Many of these home will be rented out. People need a place to live and if they can't afford to build or buy for themselves, they will be forced to rent. I believe that's the greater plan.