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Updated almost 5 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Paul Moore
  • Commercial Real Estate Fund Manager
  • Lynchburg, VA
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WSJ Article says "Home Prices are Rising" How can this be?

Paul Moore
  • Commercial Real Estate Fund Manager
  • Lynchburg, VA
Posted

Why do you think this is happening and do you think this is a short term holdout before a crash?  Here is the article.  https://www.wsj.com/articles/w...

I have been predicting a steep drop in home prices on my Saturday morning BP shows. I'll be discussing this on my show at 11am ET/8am PT again this Saturday.  I would love to hear from you on this.  

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Brian Burke
#1 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Investor
  • Santa Rosa, CA
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Brian Burke
#1 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Investor
  • Santa Rosa, CA
Replied

I don't know, Paul.  I've been trying to figure out what might cause a significant drop and I'm not seeing it.  Not yet, anyway.

The steep drop in 2005-2009 was the result of a flood of inventory coming to market from foreclosures.  And the foreclosures were caused by crazy lending standards.  Without that flood, the supply side remains relatively constrained and construction hasn't been keeping up.  There will probably be an increase in foreclosures over the next 18-24 months, but this increase is off of deep lows and is unlikely to be anything like the GFC.

That leaves the demand side.  Certainly recent events will do something to demand.  Some people who lost jobs won't be able to afford to buy now.  But does this simply return balance to a market which was previously a seller's market?  Or does demand drop low enough that sellers are forced to drop prices to get a buyer?  My sense of it is this happens to an extent, but not a large extent.  Maybe prices level for a couple of years.  Maybe they drop 5% or so.  Maybe even 10%.  But further than that?  I really don't think so. 

Impacts will likely vary from market to market.  Maybe people want to avoid density so they move out of city centers into the suburbs again, reversing a recent trend the other way.  Maybe people move from "hot zones" like New York and go to less populated states.  I'm not sure yet--but I do think that some areas will see a greater impact than others, some not at all, and some markets will continue to (or start to) increase.  Time will tell...

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