Anonymous wrote:If you buy in the next couple of months you will be being buying at the worst possible point since 2007. If you are comfortable with that, that’s up to you, but I would ask what is so urgent that you can’t wait 6 or 12 months? The people who are telling you to buy now, that it will be fine, are realtors who have a personal financial stake in keeping the inflated market going for as long as possible. These are salespeople. Talk to a market forecaster who has nothing to gain from you losing money on a purchase. Read about what’s going on in the larger market, what the rising interest rates will do to prices, what the Fed is doing and predicting. Don’t listen to salespeople.
Incidentally, the people who said don’t buy last year were also right. People who bought in 2021 will take a financial beating too during the downturn. Just not as bad a beating as the people buying now. In a few weeks it’s expected their houses will be worth whatever it’s valuation in 2019 was. They didn’t buy at the absolute peak (which was probably last week) but they still paid a premium they won’t be able to recover anytime soon. Talk to someone in your real life who understands market behavior. Don’t take anonymous advice from a bunch of realtors on the internet.
Anonymous wrote:If you buy in the next couple of months you will be being buying at the worst possible point since 2007. If you are comfortable with that, that’s up to you, but I would ask what is so urgent that you can’t wait 6 or 12 months? The people who are telling you to buy now, that it will be fine, are realtors who have a personal financial stake in keeping the inflated market going for as long as possible. These are salespeople. Talk to a market forecaster who has nothing to gain from you losing money on a purchase. Read about what’s going on in the larger market, what the rising interest rates will do to prices, what the Fed is doing and predicting. Don’t listen to salespeople.
Incidentally, the people who said don’t buy last year were also right. People who bought in 2021 will take a financial beating too during the downturn. Just not as bad a beating as the people buying now. In a few weeks it’s expected their houses will be worth whatever it’s valuation in 2019 was. They didn’t buy at the absolute peak (which was probably last week) but they still paid a premium they won’t be able to recover anytime soon. Talk to someone in your real life who understands market behavior. Don’t take anonymous advice from a bunch of realtors on the internet.
Anonymous wrote:Tbh is but now bc prices never seem to go down. I say this as someone who bought in the 2008 bubble
Anonymous wrote:OP here-yes, thanks so much!
Anonymous wrote:If you buy in the next couple of months you will be being buying at the worst possible point since 2007. If you are comfortable with that, that’s up to you, but I would ask what is so urgent that you can’t wait 6 or 12 months? The people who are telling you to buy now, that it will be fine, are realtors who have a personal financial stake in keeping the inflated market going for as long as possible. These are salespeople. Talk to a market forecaster who has nothing to gain from you losing money on a purchase. Read about what’s going on in the larger market, what the rising interest rates will do to prices, what the Fed is doing and predicting. Don’t listen to salespeople.
Incidentally, the people who said don’t buy last year were also right. People who bought in 2021 will take a financial beating too during the downturn. Just not as bad a beating as the people buying now. In a few weeks it’s expected their houses will be worth whatever it’s valuation in 2019 was. They didn’t buy at the absolute peak (which was probably last week) but they still paid a premium they won’t be able to recover anytime soon. Talk to someone in your real life who understands market behavior. Don’t take anonymous advice from a bunch of realtors on the internet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are on the market for two years now. We are in our thirties but we were living in urban areas for work(nyc, sf, dc) so never bought a home before.
We finally managed to collect the downpayment and with spring, there are actually some listings that we like. But reading these bubble news everyday are so depressing. My husband has a start up company, so we have a good monthly income but also in a high risk situation. I am in grad school and a year shy of graduation. What would you do? I read in bubble threads that it makes sense to wait for another year but people were saying the same thing last year when the prices got crazy, so I do not want to wait another year for nothing.
we are currently renting in Fairfax County.
Thanks!
We were in a similar situation last year and I'm very very sorry to have listened to people that told us to wait or made patronizing comments about how they wouldn't pay the market prices. Esp those that live in cheaper areas that we don't want to live in.
Because people in cheaper areas are bad at predicting markets? My guess is you are a realtor. Any potential buyer who didn’t buy last year (and still hasn’t bought)!is breathing a sigh of relief right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are on the market for two years now. We are in our thirties but we were living in urban areas for work(nyc, sf, dc) so never bought a home before.
We finally managed to collect the downpayment and with spring, there are actually some listings that we like. But reading these bubble news everyday are so depressing. My husband has a start up company, so we have a good monthly income but also in a high risk situation. I am in grad school and a year shy of graduation. What would you do? I read in bubble threads that it makes sense to wait for another year but people were saying the same thing last year when the prices got crazy, so I do not want to wait another year for nothing.
we are currently renting in Fairfax County.
Thanks!
We were in a similar situation last year and I'm very very sorry to have listened to people that told us to wait or made patronizing comments about how they wouldn't pay the market prices. Esp those that live in cheaper areas that we don't want to live in.
Anonymous wrote:We are on the market for two years now. We are in our thirties but we were living in urban areas for work(nyc, sf, dc) so never bought a home before.
We finally managed to collect the downpayment and with spring, there are actually some listings that we like. But reading these bubble news everyday are so depressing. My husband has a start up company, so we have a good monthly income but also in a high risk situation. I am in grad school and a year shy of graduation. What would you do? I read in bubble threads that it makes sense to wait for another year but people were saying the same thing last year when the prices got crazy, so I do not want to wait another year for nothing.
we are currently renting in Fairfax County.
Thanks!