BabiGayPimp
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Climate, location, amenties aside, what ultimately determines home prices is the money supply. From 1996 to 2006 home prices exploded in many areas due to an abundance of cheap money (from drunken lenders) and a still booming economy. From what I hear, that's all dried up. The money tree is bare.
Americans have lost trillions in paper wealth with the stock market meltdowns, soaring unemployement and health costs, and a general losss of confidence in the financial markets.
I think the era of $700,000 California bungalows, bidding wars over run-down tract-style ranch homes, and $800,000 shoebox condos in Florida and Nevada are over. People who paid those kinds of prices at the top of the market will probably lose their shirts and a whole lot more. That's unfortunate, but the writing was on the wall. An asset (if you want to call it that in this case) cannot keep doubling and tripling in value right up to infinity.
I see home prices, generally, continuing to fall in many places until they are more closely aligned with what banks are willing to lend and what people are able to pay.
So, I wouldn't be in a hurry to buy just yet.
Americans have lost trillions in paper wealth with the stock market meltdowns, soaring unemployement and health costs, and a general losss of confidence in the financial markets.
I think the era of $700,000 California bungalows, bidding wars over run-down tract-style ranch homes, and $800,000 shoebox condos in Florida and Nevada are over. People who paid those kinds of prices at the top of the market will probably lose their shirts and a whole lot more. That's unfortunate, but the writing was on the wall. An asset (if you want to call it that in this case) cannot keep doubling and tripling in value right up to infinity.
I see home prices, generally, continuing to fall in many places until they are more closely aligned with what banks are willing to lend and what people are able to pay.
So, I wouldn't be in a hurry to buy just yet.

