#226
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#227
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It feels like yet another way that you are penalized for being born in the last 30 years. Sincerely, A disgruntled millennial |
#228
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thank you
prop 19! i didn't follow it, but it will be relevant to us in the future
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#229
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That’s what we did when the kid moved out. Sold a SFH and moved a few mikes away into a more walkable neighborhood. House is smaller and cost the same as we sold the previous one but was totally worth it.
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#230
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"Bills from both Democrats and Republicans are popping up to make it harder for institutional investors to sweep up so many single-family properties that they affect affordability for both renters and would-be buyers. That includes plans from Republicans to heavily tax large landlords to get them out of the business of single-family homes. There are also bills to cap ownership." |
#231
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I've seen similar figures thrown around - and its likely a clickbait headline thats something to the effect of "25% of houses sold last quarter/year [in a year with very low volume] in a specific market [that has other factors contributing] are going to institutional investors" I am awful curious what bills that congress thinks will do any good. Most housing markets are far, far more influenced by town/county governments than anything federal. And most of the federal control is through FHFA, HUD and the GSE's, which dont require congress to change policy directions. All that said, there's a real problem in a lot of markets, and those local governments are asleep at the wheel. They have the property tax lever available to deter multiple/corporate ownership and I dont see any of them using it. All the towns along the blue ridge were awful quick to pass new regulations that clamp down on air b&b rentals so why is this any different? |
#232
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https://www.minneapolisfed.org/artic...or-owned-homes
This is research isold, but it is a good overview of the workings of the market. Currently the number is around 25%, but I think it has become the focus of attention because the large institutions have been the most aggressive in raising rents. And rents are a large portion of recent sticky inflation. You can also look at Pew Trust, Redfin, they all have research on this. Last edited by verticaldoug; 05-09-2024 at 06:09 AM. |
#233
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I'm not saying this isnt a real problem, because it is, but, I hate media clickbait headlines that dont really tell you the whole story. It does a huge disservice in shaping public opinion and policy. |
#234
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Honestly, worrying about investor s buying residential real estate becomes a non-issue if cities just market rate housing. Investor s are looking to rent out properties, so somebody still gets to live there. Rental properties become particularly attractive when housing is scarce because that gives a lot of pricing power to the landlords, but when housing is abundant, renting becomes much more affordable. That would be good.
So you allow more housing and you get some combination of cheaper rent or more home ownership, if the cheaper rent dissuades institutional investors. On the other hand, if you have housing scarcity, to some extent you can make rules that affect who get s economic benefit, but those rules tend to be a zero-sum allocation, rather than an overall improvement in social welfare.
__________________
Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#235
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I wonder though if/when Gen X and Millennials finally take over... will they be smart enough in California to demand a change to a sensible real estate tax situation or will they just change it to grandfather themselves in and screw Gen Z or Alpha. There was something I read recently that was disturbing. I get it Gen X and Xennials (like myself) are a baby bust and we will always be underrepresented as homeowners. But Millenials are a big generation just like Boomers. And right now in the US apparently Baby Boomers own 2x more of the stock of 3 or more bedroom houses than Millennials, despite Boomers basically all being empty nest at this point. "Downsizing" has not really happened yet, they are still holding onto a large % of the housing stock across the country. And at least what I have seen "downsize" often means "build me a 3000-4000 sq. foot condo with 3-4 bedrooms in a 55+ community" which means fewer houses being built that younger families can buy. Last edited by benb; 05-09-2024 at 09:56 AM. |
#236
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It was a huge victory IMO and barely passed |
#237
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Greg |
#238
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Housing prices in Wyoming are not terrible. I plan on putting 20% down and once we can move, put the AZ house on the market. When the AZ place sells, I'll restructure the mortgage by buying down the principle and shorten the length. My AZ neighborhood has many new construction homes, but they're all small on really small lots for families. My place is a snowbird palace with RV parking and BLM land across the back fence. |
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boomer threads, boomer threads :-) |
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