Showing posts with label home buying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home buying. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2021

Tips for Deciding Whether to Buy a House Now

 With all the activity around the country in residential sales, many buyers and potential buyers are wondering whether it's time to sit out the rush to ownership.  Even without the emotional turmoil caused by frantic bidding followed by disappointment, they are nervous about the economics of buying.  Here are some tips to consider:

1--Most importantly, what you pay every month is the key factor in deciding what you can afford.  Although home prices have risen rapidly in many price ranges, interest rates are still low.  Once you know the monthly payment associated with a given purchase, you can compare that to your total earnings.  Interest, over the life of a mortgage, makes more difference than a few thousand dollars in cost, so keep that in mind;

2--Buying at higher prices is not as risky if you plan to stay for awhile.  Americans in general are staying in their homes longer than they used to do, and most price rises even out over time.  Just as you are unlikely to buy at the very bottom of a market, you are statistically unlikely to be purchasing at the very top;

3--With that in mind, consider the likelihood of having to sell quickly for some reason.  If you are prone to be transferred often, are looking to change jobs, careers, or location, you might decide to wait.  Real estate, although it is a great investment, is illiquid, meaning that you can't just take your money out whenever you need it.  If there's a high probability that you might have to do that, you should probably wait;

4---Next think about whether you might decide to move again within the area.  If so, that's less risky, because it's fine to buy high if you are also selling high.  If all the homes go up in a region, and you are planning to remain, you will just conduct that next sell/buy at a higher price point.  You will have more equity, and you will pay more for the next property, in an inflationary scenario;

5--Inflation figures into the equation in another way.  If you have basic living expenses that will be disproportionately affected by inflation, and you do not expect your income to match the rise, then you should be more conservative.  For instance, your grocery bill and your income will likely rise or fall together, and eating out is not a requirement, so doesn't have to stay constant. Suppose, however, that you drive for a living, and gas prices take a big chunk of your monthly income--that might be a reason to worry more about inflation.  It all depends upon whether you are more or less impacted by generally higher prices;

6--We are heading into the fall bumper season for real estate. If you've been shut out in the spring market, more houses will be coming on the market right after Labor Day.  Sellers are at their most flexible in the late fall (actually, between Halloween and Thanksgiving), so you just might get a better deal soon.  That should give you hope that you can be in your new home for the new year!  Whatever you decide, we are here to help you.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Are you ready for 2015?

I know it sounds ridiculous, in the waning days of summer (hot and humid, to boot!), to be talking about the beginning of a new year.  But we in the real estate industry know the time cycles of our profession, and we know that someone who wants to be in a new home by the end of the year needs to get on the stick right now. 

Labor Day is the traditional start of the fall market--that brief two months when people rush to do what they didn't do in the spring--and we're ready for it.  Buyers suddenly wake up from the dog days of summer to rush into action, and sellers get serious about getting to closing on properties that they want to sell, especially if there are tax reasons for finishing the transaction this year.

Although these two groups can be a very motivated lot, there still needs to be some urgency in the process, since financing issues seem to take an ever-increasing amount of time, and the very end of the year can be tricky for inspections, closings, and other things.  While the first snow may seem very far away, it's just around the corner, and will throw a wrench into dates seemingly fixed in stone. 

So don't be left out in the cold--act now to achieve your 2014 goals!

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Thank You, John Paulson

If any of you have not read reports about hedge fund investor and Wall Street prognosticator John Paulson's recent speech about the economy, I can summarize it this way: Buy real estate. He told listeners that, if they didn't own a house, they should run out and buy one. If they did own one, they should buy a second home. If they already had two, they should buy a third and loan their relatives money to buy homes as well. He called it the best time in 50 years to purchase real estate, mostly thanks to historically low interest rates.

Since we are used to seeing all the stages of a real estate cycle, we know that we are at the bottom, and hope that we may even be starting up. While sales fell badly in the third quarter, due in large part to the expiration of the tax credit, prices in our region only dropped 1 to 2%. That's far less than most people think prices are off, and shows that the underlying value is solid.

Now ask yourself how you will feel next year if you do not buy now, and prices, sales, and interest rates all go up in the intervening time period. If you feel that you have enough house and enough mortgage debt, even with the prices and rates, then you'll be fine. But will you be kicking yourself if that house you coveted is now $100,000 more, and rates are up to 6 or 7%? If so, then you know what you have to do. So, as Nike says, just do it!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Finally Some Helpful Press

There was a wonderful article in the Wall Street Journal this week, that actually listed ten reasons TO buy a home. As you can tell by the title, we have come to expect that every article will result in calls from clients who have decided not to go forward with a purchase. Therefore, we were thrilled to get some help from the WSJ.

You would not be surprised by most of the reasons, because you've heard them all before. There were a couple of arguments that were particularly good, however, in the way that they were phrased. One was the perennial issue of whether a buyer should buy before the market hits bottom. All real estate professionals know the answer to that--you cannot predict the bottom, so you should just get somewhere near it and not worry. The article, however, quoted a talking head as saying two years ago that prices had to fall another 17% to reach where they should be, and that the Case-Shiller Index in those two years showed prices down 18%. That's pretty close to the bottom.

The other points I really liked were really variations of the same theme---you get a better home when you buy. That's because better properties get sold and worse properties get rented, but it's also true because you can't (or won't) personalize a rental the way you can or would your own place. It's a version of what I've been saying--that you have to like where you live--but it gives some concrete reasons as to why buying does a better job of providing that.

Low mortgage rates, big inventory, fewer taxes, long-term growth--all of these ideas were listed as well. Let's hope that some of you take the plunge after reading the paper!

Friday, January 30, 2009

Housing and the Federal TARP money

People all want to refinance or take out a new mortgage at the bottom of the market. Well, I wasn't sure before, but, based on what I've learned about the government's stimulus program, the time to get a mortgage is NOW. It turns out that the TARP money being given to banks isn't free. In the same way that the first-time homebuyer's tax credit sounds as though you don't have to pay it back, the TARP money has been characterized as a bailout, leading us to think that the banks are being granted the funds. But we were wrong--they have to pay it back, with 5% interest for the first number of years, and 7% interest after that.

So, while I previously thought that interest rates would just keep being forced down until people bought real estate, I now think we're at--or even past--the rate bottom. If a bank has to use money that it's paying 5% for, how many loans can it make for less than that, or even for the same amount, without incurring losses? In our WP mortgage joint venture with Webster Bank, we've seen rates, which had been at 5% with no points for a 30-year fixed mortgage, start to creep up. That now makes sense to me, and it's a call to action.

As I've said before, what you pay as a mortgage rate will matter more on the margin than what you pay for the property, so, if you have the money to buy a new home, buy it now! By the time you realize that rates are heading up, they will be higher yet.