More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
There is one giant elephant in the room that no one is talking about: existing home owners. People in my city actually petitioned their city council to reduce number of new constructions because they were afraid that it would make the value of their own property to go down. Too many people still see houses as investment that they happen to dwell instead an utility.
@anbuhxrris Give me the money and I'll build you a house. Anyone want a house I'm right here. They turn around and run when thwy find out what it costs to build. Then while the whole country is screaming for houses I'm supposed to make less than the buyer does or they get mad because they went to college.
Pretty much the OPEC playbook, implemented in other industries. Only positive is that since these companies aren't nation states, we can actually do something about it.
I feel investors should focus on under-the-radar stocks, considering the current rollercoaster nature of the stock market, Because 35% of my $270k portfolio comprises plummeting stocks that were once revered. I don't know where to go here out of devastation.
Despite my knowledge of investing, I have a financial advisor who did the trick in a bit more than 6 months after a lump sum capital of $500k, and I've so far made a fortune. I'm now involved in real estates, gold and silver as advised by my FA.
My CFA ‘Grace Adams Cook’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Our economy is struggling with uncertainties, housing issues, foreclosures, global fluctuations, and the pandemic aftermath, causing instability. Rising inflation, sluggish growth, and trade disruptions need urgent attention from all sectors to restore stability and stimulate growth.
In particular, amid inflation, investors should exercise caution when it comes to their exposure and new purchases. It is only feasible to get such high yields during a recession with the guidance of a qualified specialist or reliable counsel.
With my demanding job, I lack time for investment analysis. For seven years, a fiduciary has managed my portfolio, adapting to market conditions, enabling successful navigation and informed decisions. Consider a similar approach.
It is 20F hotter in Texas than most of Cali. And humidity in Georgia and Florida are miserable. People leave California because they can’t make it. But I’d rather rent in Cali than buy in Texas.
Finally saved up $217k in my emergency fund, ready to dive into investing, but now I'm realizing the housing market is a wild mess. Can’t build homes fast enough? More like, can’t figure out where to even start investing! Guess I'll just wait another decade for things to calm down… 🤷♂ #InvestingStruggles
Totally feel you, but sitting on that cash isn’t going to help either! I’d suggest consulting with an investment advisor. They might help you navigate this mess and make your money work for you. Better than letting inflation nibble away at your emergency fund!
That makes sense. I’ve been stuck in the same boat, wanting to invest but clueless about where to find a solid advisor. Any tips on finding someone trustworthy?
There are a handful of CFAs out there. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with 'Linda Aretha Reeves' for some time now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s known in her field and gets things done.
Watched Linda Aretha on the Bloomberg Finance Summit 4 years ago, and her presentation was terrific! She knows her stuff and clearly knows how to make a strategy work.
It isn't that the US cannot build homes fast enough, it's that investment firms have either bought up a lot of them or driven the cost of housing up such that most ppl are priced out of buying them.
@@eegernadesshe would need to build public housing at a rate not seen since the 1930s. The oversupply of non-profit housing would drive down prices/stabilize them, provide many good paying jobs, and would no longer be a speculative asset for bankers/landlords. Obviously, the banks and real estate speculators have a hold on policy and wouldn’t happen without packing the courts and having actual leftists in Congress and on the ground doing grassroots organizing
@@eegernadesshe would need to build public housing at a rate not seen since the 1930s. The oversupply of non-profit housing would drive down prices/stabilize them, provide many good paying jobs, and would no longer be a speculative asset for bankers/landlords.
I'm eagerly looking forward to a potential housing crisis to make affordable purchases after selling some properties in 2025. I'm also considering investing in stocks as a backup plan. Any advice on the best timing for these investments? I've seen significant trading profits, but there are concerns about the market's instability and the chance of a dead cat bounce. Could you explain why this market phenomenon occurs?
Investing in both real estate and stocks could indeed be a wise choice, particularly when accompanied by a carefully crafted trading plan to maneuver through profitable prospects.
In challenging market conditions, it's not about mistakes; it's more about lacking the expertise to thrive. During such times, seasoned individuals who weathered the 2008 financial crisis are best positioned to foresee substantial gains.
Contemplating the idea of consulting advisors for guidance has been occupying my thoughts lately. I'm at a point where seeking counsel could be beneficial, but I'm uncertain about the tangible advantages their services could provide.
Desiree Ruth Hoffman, my CFA, boasts a stellar reputation in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her qualifications. With her extensive experience, she serves as an invaluable asset for those seeking financial market advice.
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Developer here. Firstly it's the land prices due to megacorps buying up raw land and residential property, that shouldn't be allowed if you ask me. Second, there are a number of innovative building methods such as CEB which improve quality, longevity, and cut costs, but the regulatory environment makes it challenging to try new building concepts. In some places you need a permit to so much as build a shed, which is discouraging. You also have rediculous zoning laws which are not only a nightmare to navigate but dissuade villages from forming (ludicrous building spacing requirements, or recreational only zoning that nobody can live on full time). I'd also like to point out that the way we build today, stick frame with modern concrete, is dooming structures to last only 100 years at best, whereas we could realistically build homes at a similar price to last more than several hundred (just look at Europe). It's mostly regulation and I'm sure "squatters rights" is dissuading a lot of potential capital flow because landlords understandably don't want to fuss with that.
Federal Reserve prints money for mortgages, which artificially raises home and land prices. Have you ever seen the Fed's balance sheet? No, didn't think so. I am yet to meet an American who has. Google up Federal Reserve H41 Current Release, scroll down to Mortgage Backed Securities and note that all numbers are in Millions. Powell is sitting on $2.6 Trillion that he has bought with freshly printed inflation to raise house prices. As long as this Federal Reserve intervention continues, there will be a mismatch between house prices, construction, demand etc. If USA was a free-market capitalist country, house prices would always be just as much as people can afford, no more no less. We have plenty of land. We have plenty of poor neighborhoods that can be gentrified.
Building houses that last 200+ years would make it even more unaffordable. Also, most people don’t even live that long. In Europe, they had to replace pretty much every single piece inside those old homes, costing more than building a cheap new one.
In my area, most of this buying of raw land by corporations is not to build houses or even people warehouses. They buy the land for data centers, logistics warehouses, modern factories and even farming. The basic model for choosing how to use your land in the most profitable way has not changed since I was involved in building such decisions systems 30+ years ago.
I don’t care if it’s European in style (been there on hundreds of occasions), it’s still going to depreciate on a 29 year schedule. European refrigerators, stoves, HVAC, etc. last likely shorter than American ones. If you don’t believe look at all of the electrical problems on European autos versus Japanese. Also a European tile roof still leaks and when it need replacing is 10x the cost in Europe of an American Asphalt shingles room. Also, as I already knew but got reinforced today as a 6 year tenant left. Yes Gen Z trashes houses on a 7 year schedule rather than 29. The paradigm has shifted worse. Being a landlord is the crappiest job on earth. I’m also helping a friend build his house at a cheaper cost (DIY). Literally took the local yocals over 4 months to do a perk test just to start building and they didn’t even give a day or 2 notice before showing up. That’s why there is slow construction, government lazy beaurocrats. Forget about every other stupid idea, you only need one. Individual builders have to have all permits or perks approved before any builder can build any apartment/condo. You would see Govt S%^& happening quick. The worst is low income and apartments are a blight on your cities and a disaster on local budgets. Even in cheaper States like SC each child in school takes over $30K on costs per year. If you in courage families (Avg 2 kids) to come to your locality for cheap housing are they paying $60K a year in property tax on crapping structures. You want retirees in your home state you bunch of idiots.
What I got from this video is America is turning every essential need to a business and is being greedy. The average working person cannot afford to buy or own a home.
Same in europe too. Here in the UK the big house builders actually slowed down when interest rates went up to keep their prices high. They dropped completed homes by 25%-40% a year to limit supply and keep prices high (I work in the construction industry).
Two words: zoning laws. Those need to change, and while we're at it, get rid of corporations and "foreign investment" in residential property. We've also effectively made it illegal to build lower income and higher density housing.
@@carolr7823 It's also zoning laws like on the west coast that lock land into agricultural zoning so those neighborhoods can't expand outwards. And high density housing like high rises is the natural progression of any big enough city
@@carolr7823 Urban sprawl is what make America so unlivable without cars, I rather live in a densely populated neighborhood where my groceries can be picked up within walking distance. Cities in Europe or Asia are densely populated, residents live on top of small shops, that what make them so vibrant, instead of the concrete jungles America has
What corporations, they actually build homes. Calpers, teachers retirement funds, Firemen retirement funds are the ones that buy Apartments/Real estate for stable returns to pay retirees on an annualized basis. Are you saying retirement funds are unethical or need stopping you liberal hack
As a childless, pet- less person, i know i can't afford to buy a home. There's no certainty in life, I'll move wherever the job is. In March, i learned that there's a local church, donated it's land, and build affordable housing in short period of time. 2 of the residents i talked to, said she was homeless for over 5 years. One day, she was told that she was selected to be the new affordable unit. It comes fully furnished, kitchen appliances, bedding and a common laundry room. It a 500 units, 2 story building with elevator. The entire building is for seniors housing only. With her SS monthly income, she can finally pay her $500 rent . Both of them volunteer at the church, they make sure the grounds are well kept. This happened in the border town near California and Mexico, this spring, 2024. The mayor was there for the opening ceremony with 1 local news reporter. Such story are seldom reported on national news.
A border town 500 unit complex at $500/month doesn’t sound that appealing or great of a deal. Tenants just left my rental at $650/month and it 3 bedroom and a house on 1/2 acre not a 1000 people creating noise and problems. Certainly not in a border town. BTW the whole story sounds questionable and stupid, cuz I’ve never ever heard of 500 units at 2 stories tall even when I visited Russia during communism
This video also forgets to mention the reason why housing supply is low is because we have so much illegal immigrants About 10 million clogging up all the housing, this increasing the prices
If the local officials would let me split my land, I'd happily build multiple starter homes on it. As it is, they won't and I'll have to build big just to justify the cost. Three 1200sqft houses would be better than one 36000 sqft house, but that will only happen if the local officials change their regulations.
the house prices will adapt to the people of the country who have a will to live in them. now that we have settled that, if the federal reserve keeps the ability to borrow money at 0%, for 10 years, its easy enough for the private equity and banks to straight buy up houses as assets instead of the CDO's that they were buying before 07. Thomas Jefferson "If you give the power to inflate and deflate the currency to the banks, america will be homeless in the country her forefathers conquered" Jefferson predicted this would happen 200 years ago
@@swampwizbut they are there for so many. I have a big house and commuted 2 hours each way to be near a good job and to afford a house for a family. We didn’t eat out or vacation for years. Our home appreciated because of location and inflation. Hardest but best thing we did. We want to move since our family is leaving now. The only thing that will correct this is a cyclical recession and pullback on gov spending. This is all a result of deficit spending catching up.
Builder here and I can tell you two things that would change everything. Make permits easy to get. Make property easy to split. This would create a home building explosion in popular areas.
Yes, most new houses are expensive to heat and cool because they'll save money anywhere they can. Something as simple as energy efficient windows is super rare in USA.
I'm constantly seeing newspaper articles about Lennar Homes starting to fall apart and needing thousands or tens of thousands of dollars in repairs after just 6 months of ownership.
@@MamaMeya They are not 'rich'. They simply took loans. Federal Reserve prints TRILLIONs to inflate house prices. Here is how it works: You bank gives you a mortgage for 1 Million at 3%. Freddie/Fannie/FHA buys that mortgage from the bank at face-value, but lets them keep 2%. Powell (Federal Reserve) then buys the mortgager from Freddie/Fannie/FHA with freshly printed cash. Banks have zero risk. So they keep giving out as many mortgages as they can (they keep the 2%). Look up Federal Reserve H41 Current Release, scroll down to Mortgage Backed Securities, and you will see Powell is sitting on $2.6 TRILLION of mortgages he has bought. If you qualify for a loan, you are 'rich'. That's all.
I'm sure the Fed would say "good, our inflation policies are working". You've had 17 years of historically low interest rates, and suddenly you haven't - what did you expect? Sorry to sound unsympathetic but the question you should be asking is why did my industry build McMansions for more than a decade when it was obvious that fewer and fewer people could afford to live in them? Why is there such a mismatch between the supply and what buyers actually need? And why, when conditions were perfect for house builders to build crazy since 2008 did they fail to take advantage?
@@3DGEM3 Which part of the Federal government do you refer to? I'm sure the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Department of Labor would love for more houses to be built, and builders employed. But the Federal Reserve "conducts the nation’s monetary policy to promote maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates in the U.S. economy." Now sometimes that means the Federal Reserve and the rest of government are pulling in the same direction - but other times it doesn't. Inflation, at it's simplest, is too much money chasing too few goods. The whole point of interest rate rises are to damp down demand in the economy by discouraging consumers from consuming by making credit more expensive - one of the biggest uses of credit in any developed economy are mortgages. The rates go up, people are discouraged from buying a new house, if they don't buy a new house they don't spend money on all the other stuff people like to buy when they move - paint, new curtains, furniture etc. Reduce demand and demand led inflation falls - and a good part of the US inflation of the last three years is demand led. Not all, but a good chunk. And the Federal Reserve would say their policy has worked, that they have squeezed out just enough demand to reduce inflation without causing recession and unemployment, and that they can start to take the brakes off over the next few months.. You could make the argument that since the "Great Recession" of 2008 the Federal Reserve has, through it's policies (not just interest rates), helped American banks, companies and consumers rebuild their balance sheets. And one of the principal means of doing so has been through policies that caused the paper value of assets to rise. And what is the average individual's largest asset? His home - the Fed policies are why you've seen a steady rise in house prices over the last 15 years, and why homeowners don't want to see any local development that might erode the value of their home (NIMBYism) - because they increasingly see it as an asset rather than as a place to live. For banks the rising value of houses means that fewer of the mortgages they issued way back when are underwater - that in turn means that their liquidity ratios are better, which means that the Fed will allow them to loan more money to their customers. So the answer to your question is that some parts of the Federal Government at certain times don't want more people to buy houses. But at other times they might be all in favor. And other Federal Departments might be all in favor, all the time. Your question is based on the notion that "the feds" are a monolithic entity that pulls / pushes as one, in the same direction. The reality is that it is much more complex than that and, in many instances you may find that different government departments have responsibilities that conflict with one another, or overlap in some way.
Stop building million dollar McMansions. Stop building communities that come with an additional HOA cost. Build 200-300k$ homes. Remember back in the day when builders built affordable, modest size cape neighborhoods. Bring that back.
compare land costs, labour costs and material costs of back in the day and today. it's not economical anymore. there are 2 options now for a developer to make good on investment: either highly overpriced single family house or an apartment building that will house 10 families. but US is stuck up specifically on houses.
The problem is not availability but affordability. I live in Seattle metro area and we have tons of homes for sell but they are so expensive no one can afford them . A basic house going for 1 million is insane. It vary by region
Capitalism is the root cause. Housing is an investment vehicle and therefore commodification happened. Now once you join the house club you are personally disincentivized from wanting new high density housing or even just things you think someone would devalue the home as an asset. Capitalism would rather a house sit empty than have someone in need live in it for free or cheap. Personally, profiteering off of such basic necessities seems pretty bleak to me.
@@ElyonDominus I think you mean **crony capitalism** .. not capitalism. Government is in bed with the big banks and Wall St.. Harris wants government intervention to pump it even higher by 25k.. the government pumped it back in 2009 saving the banks (Obama could have saved the homeowners but didn't).. had the government not gotten involved, the banks would have failed and we'd have super cheap homes. That's capitalism. The problem is corpo socialism.
Does no school teach basic economics anymore? The less of something there is, the higher the price. The more there is, the lower the price. 'It's not the supply it's the price!' is fundamentally wrong.
@@ElyonDominushow is government regulation artificially increasing the cost of construction and limiting the number of new homes capitalism? Cities that ignore nimbys and let capitalism thrive like Houston has a ton of new construction and affordable homes.
@@dawnfire82 Your statement is basic knowledge. My comment is addressing greed . Listen I own a 2 story home here in Seattle Washington. I bought my house for 300K 6 years ago . If I was to sell my home now , I wouldn’t be able to afford later . We are living in homes we can’t afford lol . New homes are built monthly in my area but no one can afford them.
Homes aren’t being designed for individuals to own anymore. They’re being designed for corporations to buy and rent to individuals. Homeownership is just a dream unless you finance a piece of land and build a small home yourself. HOA also need to be outlawed because they are just another way to charge homeowners in perpetuity to own their homes. Home & rent price aren’t going to go down until people refuse to buy or rent by living in their car/rv or with family or friends or anywhere else.
Agreed and another problem with HOAs are that Corporations are buying up multiple homes in a HOA communities until they have the majority of the votes so the corporations will call the shots.
We didn’t have this problem three years ago because our government didn’t give away 12 million homes largely taxpayer expense, and decimate the inventory of affordable homes… Also that they could import 12 million votes It makes me wanna cry because we’re never going to solve this because we’re not allowed to say what’s causing this, and it’s just going to cause more division and pain for people and the wrong people will be blamed and the cycle continues
This wasn’t a problem three years ago, what do you think ate up 12 to 13,000,000 affordable homes? It wasn’t private equity I promise you, you can look at the numbers, the affordable homes have gone to zero in this country because of a giant v*ter importation con They love it that you blame anyone and everyone except the government that is caused this problem. We are doomed. We are doomed because we can’t have conversations based in reality.
Private equity doesn't want homes built for middle class when they are in the game themselves with massive portfolios. What is so confusing about this?
Not enough people talking about or understanding this. Also, high school internships in the skilled trades will lower the cost to build homes while creating jobs.
There are only so many upper class people you can sell houses to. There’s tremendous demand for cheaper housing so why aren’t more private equity firms and investors taking advantage of that opportunity by building new units instead of buying existing ones? It’s one less big margin you have to pay to the previous owner. So obviously there’s incentive to build new and cheaper housing, but the government creates price distortions and regulations that make that harder so as a result, supply is artificially suppressed.
@mrbloodmuffins the prices reflect the amount of money in our economy, especially in places like Austin and Seattle, with thousands of highly paid tech professionals able to bid up prices.
I’m a new dad, I moved closer to Santa Clara a few years ago and I’m thinking of purchasing a single family home there, but with real estate prices currently through the roof, is it still a good idea to buy a home or should I invest in stocks for now and just wait for a housing market correction? I heard Nvidia and AMD are strong buys.
Certain Ai companies are rumoured to be overvalued and might cause a market correction, I’d suggest you go with a managed portfolio, but even those don’t perform so well, so it’s best you reach out to a proper fiduciary to guide you, that’s what works for my spouse and I making a whooping $738k in Q4 last year.
The decision on when to pick an Adviser is a very personal one. I take guidance from ‘Jennifer Mackimm Wesley‘ to meet my growth goals and avoid mistakes, she's well-qualified and her page can be easily found on the net.
I remember as a teen my parents helping me save for a starter home. Little did we know that those would no longer exist, and I'm renting a property that's extremely overpriced.
@NoNo-ng9sl It was back in 2012, and the area was just outside of Atlanta. The gentrification of the area wasn't the surprise, but the speed of it certainly was.
They’ve literally made illegal to build an affordable home. If it only cost $20k-$50k to buy land/build a home we wouldn’t be in this predicament. But purposely created all of these zoning and code laws to drive up the price of creating an average home. They don’t want housing to be affordable. Bc if it was affordable, then people would be able to move anywhere they want. It’s about keeping people separated based on class and also income/tax bracket.
Bingo ! Carter's " Habitat for Humanity " program was very successful for young families with limited financial options. What ever happened to that program ?
@@CH-vm6cq”mom and pop” builders have nothing to do with this. This is a multi trillion dollar industry, mom and pop aren’t even on the radar, and far far less so following 2008. The only thing to offset this is to build not for profit public housing to flood the supply, provide good paying jobs and stabilize prices. Housing needs to be made into a non-speculative asset, otherwise there will always be a shortage of housing, since lower supply = higher valuations.
Yes, it's not as though bloated bureaucracies and excessive regulation are known to increase costs and slow productivity to a crawl. The problem is not too much regulation, it's too little! We need to make it so difficult and expensive to build houses that not even housing monopolies will be able to profit from it!
No This video also forgets to mention the reason why housing supply is low is because we have so much illegal immigrants About 10 million clogging up all the housing, this increasing the prices
In fact, the problem is 1 0 0 percnt due to massimmigration. Its simple math. Bring in milllions of new people every yr and they have to live somewhere. We don't need new homes, we need immmigrationrestrictions.
To purchase a building lot, permits and materials to build a home you are already well into $200-300k+ before considering labor costs to actually build it. Then you have to factor in some profit for the builder, you are well into $450K+++. I built my own home 100% myself on land that I already owned, and a modest 1600sqft home cost me just shy of $350,000.
1. Implement policy that regulates big corporations from buying all the existing single family homes and driving up prices! Neither candidate has addressed that. 2. Regulate this oligopoly of new home builders from having a strong hold on the market and making cheaply built overpriced cookie cutter homes! 3. Invest capital in better programs/incentives that help first time home buyers and rehabs for individual buyers/owners. 4. PUT TIGHER RESTRICTIONS ON CORPORATE GREED!!!
@@Senzuberry it’s supposed to work that way according to the law of supply and demand, but the dramatic housing increases in the past 5 years have not forced a downward shift in home prices or unit rentals. To the contrary, we are seeing dramatic price INCREASES. Why? It’s no longer based on supply/demand but algorithms rigging prices nationwide. Criminal!!
You must own a home already. It helps first time homeowners compete against people who already have insane equity that wouldn't get the credit. Would it increase prices..yes..Not by 25k though.
The larger businesses are, the harder it is to compete for smaller players, the better it is for consumers. Anti-trust legislation was created to protect businesses, not consumers.
The shortage is artificial, I’m a framer and my whole crew as well as many others I know have been struggling to find work this whole year, all the builders suddenly stopped building
Builders can’t get acquisitions and entitlements take way too long. We need more zoned communities that builders can acquire with the zoning already there
Lumber is back down to pre plague prices. There is no res construction maintenance or improvement. So if there is none in the big city and none in the small city wheres the boom town? A whole industry MIA
Isn't that part of the problem that the video didn't address? Modern US houses are built using essentially the same methods as 200 years ago - methods originally developed to throw up warehousing as cheaply as possible. Why not do all the basic construction on an assembly line, transport the building components by train and truck to the site where they're assembled. The only large on-site work would be digging out a foundation, laying the slab and connecting services. Think of the advantages - build the house in a factory and you don't have delays because of weather, the house can be built to finer tolerances, you don't need to mess around with as many local sub-contractors, delays in deliveries and all the other stuff that holds things up. You might have a reduced design choice but apparently that's already a thing. Or just look at the Sears Homes catalog from the Twenties and Thirties - multiple design choices and upgrade options with pre-cut components shipped to a local buyer, or builder to assemble. And all done long before laser measurement, computerized stock control etc. A hundred years later and we're back to a bunch of tradesmen doing everything onsite. It's kind of depressing when you think about it.
@@antoineclaiborne3008 I framed single family homes in Lancaster PA for $16hr where the average new home cost $800k. It's the cruelest of lives to be homeless and building homes for the wealthy. America 2024
@@user-fm6ns5nb4jthe construction industry is a fickle thing. The “I’ve been doing this for 30 years…” mentally has hindered a lot of builders from making progress. We lag behind every other industry yet the technology has existed to make progress for a long time. For example, we’ve had building scientists talk about indoor air quality for decades yet most people only got an air purifier in 2020. If you ask a random builder their HERS rating, will they have an answer? The average builder is going to take the path of least resistance just as some many other parts of society.
It is difficult to make exact projections for the housing market as it is still unclear how quickly or to what degree the Federal Reserve will reduce inflation and borrowing costs without having a substantial negative impact on demand from consumers for anything from houses to cars.
If anything, it'll get worse. Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone wants to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.
The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage rules are getting more difficult, and home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes. For now, get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. If you are at a cross roads or need honest advice on the best moves to take now, it is best to seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
'Jessica Lee Horst' is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Very short mention at 10:05 of a Trump conspiracy that Democrats will end zoning. Trump appears to be arguing that removing zoning would cause property prices to collapse- also known as making housing affordable.... 🙄
This video also forgets to mention the reason why housing supply is low is because we have so much illegal immigrants About 10 million clogging up all the housing, this increasing the prices
Let’s not forget that there’s barely any builders left, and if they trickle out supply they made massive margins. There’s zero incentive to build mixed housing on a large scale, because profit is all that matters.
The homes being built (for sale) are too expensive and interest rates are too high. In my area, Toll Brothers is building homes at a rapid pace, but these are homes *starting* at $800K and even the new rental units are starting *above* existing market rate. A correction is needed in both cases - the fundamental of economics says that with the increase in supply, this should force prices downward. Hopefully we see this play out within the next 3-5 years.
Japan reformed their zoning laws in the late 60's. Today Japan builds more housing each year than the population increase, homeless rate in Japan is close to zero and affordable housing is abundant.
I believe that in Japan the government owns all the apartment buildings so they can control the economy more decisively. They build buildings just to create construction jobs when necessary.
Black rock owns 55K homes, look it up. This administration has given away 12 million that’s 12-000-000 million. I’m so tired of this iteration of the left, making all of these awful decision and then blaming everything but themselves
Until the late 1980s the US Government was actually the by far biggest builder of houses in the country, Reagan put a stop to that and that was the start of inflating housing prices. That is what we have to get back to, the government has to start building affordable housing at scale that does not enter the open market, but gets distributed towards lower income families.
Let's NOT discuss the over 10 million border invaders in the last 3.5 years that are getting FREE taxpayer funded housing. All thanks to the current president.
If supply were to increase, value of existing homes would decrease and become more affordable- yet I’m sure homeowners don’t want that. Would that incentivize them to vote differently? Hmmm.
As a homeowner, I want my property value to go down. That means taxes would decrease. I bought my house to live in, not as a piggy bank for retirement.
Of course, CNBC completely ignores the overwhelming negative effect of Wall Street investors buying up single family homes and turning them into rentals. After her husband passed, we tried to help my mother-in-law buy a home. We were fortunate to find an estate sale (at the very top of her budget) in which the family overwhelmingly wanted someone in a similar situation (a grandparent) in their home. We had the second best bid, at the top of the market, but about $30K below the offer from an investment firm. We were lucky that they were willing to take the hit so my mother-in-law can live out her days in such a nice home. But predatory Wall Street firms are the number one reason people can't buy starter homes...
Here's an idea: Suppose for a moment that there were perhaps 15-20 million people in the US that just walked across the border and expected free housing. Could that possibly be a contributing factor?
Yeah not those crappy McMansions that are built in the middle over nowhere, probably on a floodplain, on some endangered turtle habitat probably lol. Plenty of underutilized space closer to cities that we should be focusing on, like those stupid Walmart parking lots lol.
So the fact that houses are unaffordable isn’t a factor? People can’t afford new homes. That’s the story. That’s it. The story still changes though, somehow.
Because homes are over priced by $200k and the average American cant afford them. Simple answer. We actually have plenty of homes and land available, but unfortunately we allowed the wealthiest families to control all of our politicians and allowed them to pass laws and fees that make home construction too expensive for the average American. Simple answer.
Correction: Blackstone will buy them up, raise the rent and make it so no one can afford to live in them. Can't have those messy peasants ruining your investment property 😅
That’s so not true This video also forgets to mention the reason why housing supply is low is because we have so much illegal immigrants About 10 million clogging up all the housing, this increasing the prices
This is all a red herring. There are 15 million vacant housing units in the US and less than 1 million homeless people. We have enough houses, we just have to be brave enough to say everybody deserves one and not listen to anybody who says otherwise
Government subsidizes education through student loans. This caused an explosion in college tuition. If government gets involved in subsidizing houses ($25K) it make homes even more unaffordable. Government is almost never the solution and is almost always the problem.
The biggest cause of state school cost going up is the shift from mostly the state then the federal government reducing their subsidies then shifting that cost to the students. Baby Boomers college education was heavily subsidized.
Wrong title! The US can build homes fast enough, but people can no longer afford homes. That's the problem. The builder doesn't build the house unless you sign the papers. Homes are ridiculously expensive across the US, plus property taxes are thousands of dollars a year. Primary homes should be tax-free or at least very low, but the next home owned should be highly taxed.
I mean this issue could be fixed if we had mixed use zoning for various types of households, incomes, and families. Street planning is underrated when it comes to fixing the housing problem
@@nick37781 Not at all. I worked to have my own four walls and a nice yard. I don't want my neighbor to be all up in my business. I don't want businesses on my street with people coming and going all day. I like my quiet suburb.
@@bwofficial1776I find neighbors are more up in my business in neighborhoods with single family homes, because they have more vested interest in the “neighborhood character”. The most annoying neighbor I ever had as a homeowner was the one I lived the furthest away from and didn’t share a wall with lmfao. Having a separate structure won’t save you from the neighborhood busybodies.
I am currently in my 50s and This is no time to taper retirement savings. I want to max out my retirement contributions and I also have another $120k in a savings account that I want to invest in a non-retirement account. Where would you invest this as of now?
Look up, dividend aristocrats. Pick six to ten from that list. Those companies have a track record of 25+ years of paying dividends. Also, you should work with a financial advisor to help set up a well-structured portfolio.
@@ShellyHuerta I agree. Based on personal experience working with a financial advisor, I currently have $800k in a well-diversified portfolìo that has experienced exponential growth from when I started. It's not only about having money to invest in stocks, but you also need to be knowledgeable, persistent, and have strong hands to back it up.
@@PatyRamírez-z9z Your advisor must be really good. How I can get in touch? My retirement portfolio's decline is a concern, and I could use some guidance.
@@PatyRamírez-z9z Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
Raise taxes on the super-rich. The billionaires. They don’t just keep all that money in a savings account. They have to have something to invest in. And it’s going into private equity firms and corporations that are buying up residential properties across the country, thus reducing available housing and drastically increasing prices. There was an article in the Dallas Morning News in July 2024, which explained that more than 60% of residential homes in Fort Worth, Texas are owned by corporations. 😮
If local government allowed higher density, builders will build. It's more cost effective for them to do so. But they can't get zoning and variances approved, and NIMBY'ers shout down commissioner hearings to protest higher density communities
@@weirdshibainu my street has a handful of twins already . If there was 1 empty lot I would have 0 problem with a builder doing a twin or 3 or 4 rowhomes
@@weirdshibainu I said higher density. I never said a 100 unit condo building on (1) residential parcel. Twins, rowhomes, 2-4 unit residential. They used to be very popular in the 50s-70s. Then they stopped allowing them
I live in a suburb near Kansas City, and we don't see this "housing shortage" here. There are houses for sale in both new and existing neighborhoods. The media is attempting to fool us to try to think there is a shortage. Houses that are sold within a week of listing are most likely bought by REITs, and buyers like you and I have no chance of competing. Sad truth.
The answer is simply immigration. Our population does not grow naturally. Most of our population growth comes from grown adults coming here, often with families, and immediately needing housing. But you'll never see the news saying that immigration (i.e., cheap labor) is a problem.
...Because...it is NOT Immigration....It IS Large USA CORPORATIONS Buying Up "Homes" to Rent Out...Making The Payments on Their INVESTMENT Properties...
USA has 258.3 million adults, 144 million homes, and 653,104 homeless. A culture where adults can't stand sharing homes is creating an artificial housing shortage. Developers don't wonna build 258.3 million homes because there's a risk of vacancies skyrocketing if there's a future surge in adults sharing homes.
Small builders can’t put out quantity and large builders can’t/don’t put out quality. There’s a lack of skilled workers to produce said houses. Zoning laws very by town in pretty significant ways. Lots are expensive in some areas. Permits are expensive, some jurisdictions have months of backlog. There are many hurdles to overcome.
Good point. That's less that 4 homes per builder and the report states that most of the building is happening in markets where market share is dominated by the big 10.
This video also forgets to mention the reason why housing supply is low is because we have so much illegal immigrants About 10 million clogging up all the housing, this increasing the prices
People that own property are rich. They view property as an investment. They don’t want more houses built, because that will lower the value of their properties. Wealthy property owners want housing to remain scarce so they can keep making more money on their “investment“. Housing will remain scarce with high prices indefinitely.
Rental is usually a waste of money, every payment made and yet no valuable asset to own? No thanks. I bought my house in 2012 in Seattle, you can see the change in value over that time span
@@trevorellis-guice5794it doesn’t even cost that in the northeast and labor is notoriously expensive here. Either you have a ridiculously large roof or you’ve been had.
Oh it can build them, and does, but good luck getting into one. Also houses are too big. The builders are focusing too much on luxury when we need practicality.
in my opinion, housing market crash is imminent due to the high number of individuals who purchased homes above the asking price despite the low interest rates. These buyers find themselves in precarious situations as housing prices decline, leaving them without any equity. If they become unable to afford their homes, foreclosure becomes a likely outcome. Even attempting to sell would not yield any profits. This scenario is expected to impact a significant number of people, particularly in light of the anticipated surge in layoffs and the rapid increase in the cost of living
I suggest you offset your real estate and get into stocks, A recession as bad it can be, provides good buying opportunities in the markets if you're careful and it can also create volatility giving great short time buy and sell opportunities too. This is not financial advise but get buying, cash isn't king at all in this time.
The issue is people have the "I want to do it myself mentality" but not equipped enough for a crash, hence get burnt. Ideally, advisors are reps for investing jobs, and at first-hand encounter, my portfolio has yielded over 300% since 2020 just after the pandemic to date.
Exactly everyone bidded themselves out to oblivion...House cost 400k ,bid 450k, someone else bids 480k .drives up the cost and so on and so on... making all 400k inventory now at $480k.... that is why we bought a new home... NO bidding war ... the price listed is the price you pay..