As housing prices are tied to the property tax it is a good thing for people who are not planning to sell anytime soon. Remember a home is a place you live, not an investment. People who treat homes as investments cause a lot of problems for people who just want to live somewhere that isn't propping up some middleman landlord.
The expected return is considerably higher now, this should mean that houses should be traded at PR at around 20 again (as opposed to upwards of 30 when there was no better investments to be made).
Investors will likely not be an issue as long as we don't go into zirp again.
Isn't it only bad news for people who are selling their homes?
People borrow money against their house to buy a car or a boat because rates are much better. The bank tells them to borrow a few ten thousands extra while they are at it, since the rate is so good. Why don't you take a vacation or get that new thing you wanted to buy?
From where do you think everybody has so much money to spend, while you are working full time and have nothing? It's not only credit cards...
This has been so weird to see over the last couple dips.
In the ‘08 crash, banks were sitting on houses that were developing mold issues because they had been sitting vacant so long. These houses were getting more damaged and less desirable by the day, and before long would require hundreds of thousands of dollars to fix (up from the low-tens already evident) but they still preferred to sit on them. They weren’t listed, or were listed but at too-high prices and they were just ignoring offers, not even responding.
Then you look at “depressed” housing prices that are still way over historic norms, so you’d think builders would keep going… but no, they totally halt all work, no new houses until prices are heading up again.
Something’s super messed-up about the housing market in ways that it wasn’t in the last millennium. Recessions don’t even fix it, they just make everything pause.
The key of course is that the downturn isn't so massive (hello 2008!), where the blood flows so freely that the layoffs/foreclosures/etc. overwhelm the eligible buyer pool in absolute numbers. That can for sure happen, but is atypical historically.
That said, even if housing prices drop materially and eventually bottom it will provide little opportunity for "normal" folks to buy in if they're jobless. Will be interesting to see if Fed interest rate cuts translate to mortgage rate cuts, and whether those rate cuts lessen any price drops.
I've said this before on here, but the historical price-to-income for housing has been something like 4x. Today it's 7x (that is as insane as it sounds). A long way to revert to the mean unless you really think "this time is different."