Originally posted by Zkribbler
True. IMHO, real estate prices have overheated in the past couple of years. Speculators drive up the price of real estate, and rising prices attract more speculators.
But with the looming spectre of higher interest rates, speculators are beginning to realize the party's over.
BTW: There almost certainly will not be a crash like we see occasionally in the stock market. Real estate is illiquid because (a) it takes a while to unload real estate and (b) people have to live somewhere. So, even a worst case scenario will just be a slow decline in prices.
True. IMHO, real estate prices have overheated in the past couple of years. Speculators drive up the price of real estate, and rising prices attract more speculators.
But with the looming spectre of higher interest rates, speculators are beginning to realize the party's over.
BTW: There almost certainly will not be a crash like we see occasionally in the stock market. Real estate is illiquid because (a) it takes a while to unload real estate and (b) people have to live somewhere. So, even a worst case scenario will just be a slow decline in prices.
It sounds like the problem is that people who got into the market recently often did so using adjustable-rate instruments, and people who took out huge home equity loans against their houses' rising value also frequently did so with adjustable-rate instruments. Now that interest rates are rising, people will find their mortgages and/or home equity loans eating up a bigger and bigger portion of their paychecks. (At the same time, much credit card interest is also adjustable-rate, which is also contributing to the squeeze). As the percentage of paychecks going to debt-repayment expands, the money available for consumer spending contracts -- and that may be where the problem will lie.
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