Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am seeing a huge surge in inventory that I haven’t seen since last fall. I think with rates slightly dipping, people are testing the waters again.
Inventory driven by whom or what?
People trading up? Investors getting out? Tons of people relocating? Old people retiring and moving to low cola places?
Who’s selling and why?
Not the PP, but I will share my observation. I work in related field.
Inventory of houses occupied by old people retiring and moving out. They don't even have mortgage so rate is not an issue for them. They will sell and buy cheaper house somewhere else outright and still have some money left.
I don't see inventory coming from normal families moving up in price range because they have very low rate right now and moving up is extremely expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bubbles in housing really take a long time to deflate. If you go back and look at the data from 2006 to 2008, there was almost no decrease from 2006 to 2007 then a dramatic decrease from 2007 to 2008 (this is aggregate data published by the fed so while I am sure people will have contrary data points, the aggregate data doesn’t lie). Pent up demand doesn’t go away overnight. I expect this year to stay at peak pricing but I think 2024 is where things will get interesting. But if you’re a buyer, I get that it is tough to wait especially if you’re renting right now.
+1
I will look at aggregate data than anecdotes.
Anonymous wrote:Looks like bidding wars have returned
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ba-PFmHp_7M&t=4s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am seeing a huge surge in inventory that I haven’t seen since last fall. I think with rates slightly dipping, people are testing the waters again.
Inventory driven by whom or what?
People trading up? Investors getting out? Tons of people relocating? Old people retiring and moving to low cola places?
Who’s selling and why?
Anonymous wrote:Bubbles in housing really take a long time to deflate. If you go back and look at the data from 2006 to 2008, there was almost no decrease from 2006 to 2007 then a dramatic decrease from 2007 to 2008 (this is aggregate data published by the fed so while I am sure people will have contrary data points, the aggregate data doesn’t lie). Pent up demand doesn’t go away overnight. I expect this year to stay at peak pricing but I think 2024 is where things will get interesting. But if you’re a buyer, I get that it is tough to wait especially if you’re renting right now.
Anonymous wrote:I am seeing a huge surge in inventory that I haven’t seen since last fall. I think with rates slightly dipping, people are testing the waters again.