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FIRST: Get a 30 year mortgage.
That’s because 30 year interest rates are still the lowest they’ve ever been, in history - and when you consider that investment returns are often WAY higher than what you pay in interest, it starts making sense NOT to pay off your mortgage early and invest the difference, instead. But the 30 year mortgage also gives you a MAJOR advantage to any other option and that’s - flexibility. There’s nothing stopping you from paying off a 30 year mortgage in 15 years…just make a higher payment every month, and it’s the same thing.
SECOND: Always get a fixed interest rate
By locking in your rate, you know with 100% certainty how much it’s going to cost for the next 30 years, and from that - you can plan accordingly.
THIRD: Refinance your loan to save more money
This allows you to get a brand new loan that replaces your existing loan - and in many situations, the new loan is going to be at a lower interest rate than you’re currently paying - THEREBY saving you more money.
FOURTH: Avoid selling your home if you don't need to
The truth is, real estate values ONLY matter if you intend on selling - so, everything I’ve mentioned is designed to make your monthly payments as low and predictable as possible, just so that you don’t NEED to sell. Ideally, by NOT selling - you’ll have the time to ride out any fluctuations in price LONG enough for them to eventually recover, and bring you back to profitability.
FIFTH: Keep a safety fund on the side at all times
With real estate - ANYTHING can come up, at ANY point, that will end up costing you money. Plus, no matter what happens - you’ll still have fixed costs like property taxes and insurance that will need to be paid every year, and you’ll need to budget for that. So, my recommendation is to always keep a few months of your properties expenses saved up, in cash…so that way, should something come up, you’ll have the money to pay for it.
SIXTH: ONLY buy a home that you can comfortably afford.
The lower your payment is in relation to how much you make, the safer it is that you’ll be able to keep it through a downturn without running out of money - AND by doing so, the more likely you are to actually make money.
Real estate should IDEALLY be something you ONLY buy if you intend to hold on to it at LEAST 8-10 years…so, plan with the intention of keeping it at least that long, and plan accordingly in terms of how much you’ll need to make in order to continue making those payments.
For business or one-on-one real estate investing/real estate agent consulting inquiries, you can reach me at GrahamStephanBusiness @gmail.com
*Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies which Graham Stephan will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. Graham Stephan is part of an affiliate network and receives compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available.

What's up kids, it's dad here. Okay, there we go. I said it anyway. I think it's time we address a topic that i'm sure a lot of people have considered recently, and that would be the next real estate crash.

After all, i think it's no surprise that in the last 12 months a lot has happened just recently, it was reported that real estate prices have fit another all-time record high across nearly the entire country. Housing inventory has hit an all-time record. Low and buyers are left paying significantly over asking just for a chance to get the home they want. However, it's kind of strange because during the same time as all of that 2.6 million homeowners are still in forbearance, up to 20 million tenants are still behind.

In the rent and the biggest wild card from all of this is that interest rates are now beginning to go up now. Here's the thing throughout the entire history there's always been a boom and bust cycle of the real estate market and at some point in the future, there's going to be another real estate crash now, even though we don't know exactly when and what will cause it. There are some lessons that we could use from previous real estate downturns that anyone could apply today. So let's talk about exactly what's going on right now, the chance of another crash happening sometime soon, how bad it would be if it were to happen and then precisely what you could do about it to make sure you don't lose money and instead to make sure You make money because that's what this channel is all about as with getting your two free stocks down below in the description, but really quick before we talk about that.

I got ta share a quick message from my cat: ramsay, hey guys i'll just make this super quick. I told grammy needs to give me a treat if this video gets 69 000 likes, and i really want a treat so make sure to crash that like button for the youtube algorithm. So i could stop trying to sneak into the treat bag late at night when everyone is sleeping thanks so much and now, let's get back to the video alright. So, in order to figure out how to best prepare for something like this, it's really important to understand the severity of the real estate crashes.

That have happened in the past because, even though it's easy to think that you could lose everything if the market goes down and you're underwater on your loan and then the bank forecloses on you chances are most market crashes are not as catastrophic as you might think. Like one of the first major real estate, crashes happened in the year of you guessed it 1929., just like the stock market, peaked from record high speculation and borrowed money. The real estate market fell alongside everything else. Real estate values plummeted by nearly 67, and it took nearly three decades for real estate values to recover back to their pre-crash levels.

Then, again, real estate encountered more difficulty in the 1990s. Until then, the real estate market was seeing a huge increase from new lending options. Inflation and a growing population, but the savings and loan crisis caused interest rates to go up. New constructions ended up going down and prices remained fairly flat until about 1997.
and now the most recent crash. That almost all of us should remember, is the housing collapse of 2008.. This is caused by too many people speculating on the value of real estate, fueled by easy access to money and adjustable rate mortgages that allowed anyone to buy a home as long as they could just make the introductory payments. However, a lot of those mortgages had a sudden, ballon payments built in which would cause the price of that mortgage to skyrocket after a few years, and as we all know, that turned out to be a disaster.

But as more homeowners began defaulting on their payments, when they weren't able to sell that then fell back on the bank who wasn't able to pay the investors who bought the loans to begin with, and that caused a near financial collapse. Depending on the location. Housing prices dropped anywhere from 30 to 62 percent. A new bailout was put in place, but now again in 2021, we are back at another record all-time high.

However, the interesting part throughout all of this is that, with the exception of 1929 and 2008 for the most part, the prices of housing have been fairly resilient like during and after world war ii. In the 1940s, the price of real estate ended up booming from a surge demand. Then, during the 1970s stagflation era, where the stock market went down, real estate prices ended up going up because of inflation. After that, during the 1980s recession, real estate went up in price.

Four and a half percent, because inflation was still high. The 1990s certainly saw some real estate markets going down in value, but for the most part that was limited to no more than about 10 percent. The dot-com bubble also had very little effect on real estate values. As interest rates continued going down, in fact, in 2001, home prices, climbed to at the time an all-time high, but now we have some different challenges that will directly impact the real estate market and when it comes to the issues that might happen today, we have three Obstacles to overcome the first is that right now, 2.6 million homeowners are in mortgage forbearance, meaning they've temporarily paused their mortgage payments until the illness subsides.

The concern right now is that if those 2.6 million homeowners are unable to make their mortgage payments once the forbearance period is up, they risk going into foreclosure. And if that happens, there could be a wave of foreclosures all coming on the market. To the exact same time, the other belief is that homeowners might postpone listing their homes in the market, while they're not making their payments, thereby further restricting the available supply of housing on the market than driving up prices even further. But the good news is that at least as of right now, the mortgage forbearance rate has been steadily decreasing month over month, which suggests that many homeowners just took mortgage forbearance out of an abundance for caution, because why not? And now, as the economy is beginning to recover they're starting to make their payments again, the new stimulus plan would also extend mortgage forbearance and foreclosures through june.
So even though it might be the equivalent of just kicking the can a little bit further down the road. It does give people more time to financially recover and get back on their feet, and the second concern has to do with the 20 million tenants at risk of eviction. However, i just got ta call this one out for what it is, and that would be false. I looked into this one further and they got that data just from a survey that asked people how confident they were that they would be able to make the payment next month, and in that survey they estimated that 14.2 million households don't have a hundred percent confidence.

That they could pay their rent next month and that translates into over 20 million renters. But even though that makes a great headline, that's not entirely factual, and just because you don't have 100 confidence, you can make your rent payment doesn't mean you're, not still gon na make your rent payment. In fact, if we go and use actual data from the national multi-family housing council go and say that five times we could see that over 93 of tenants are still paying their rent in full by the end of each month. However, even though that might not be as bad as some of the articles make it out to be, the tenants who are behind on the rent are a legitimate concern, and when it comes to that the average delinquent renter is nearly four months behind on their payments, They owe 5 600 and in total, 57 billion of rent has gone unpaid.

Now that was partially addressed in the upcoming stimulus package, which gives 20 billion dollars in rental assistance. Although we'll see how that plays out and how effective that actually is in helping both tenants and landlords and finally, third interest rates are beginning to go up the higher the interest rates go, the more it costs to buy real estate, which means the more pressure there Is for home prices to come down accordingly now the counter argument to this is that interest rates only go up when the economy is doing well, which could inadvertently also benefit real estate, but right now it's still too early to see what type of effect this is Going to have on housing values, if anything, so, given all the uncertainty out there and some of the variables that come with real estate values, here's how you could best prepare for another housing downturn because, like i said at some point in the future, the housing market Is going to be going down and it's extremely important that you're prepared for this so that way you can do your best to make sure you don't lose any money now. The first thing that i would recommend that everybody do is get a 30-year mortgage now. I know what most people would think when they hear this, but ma'am you pay more interest on a 30-year mortgage than a 15-year mortgage.
Why would you cost us more money? Why would you mislead us like this grand dislike and sin and yeah on the surface? It does look like you're going to be paying more interest on a 30-year mortgage, but in reality that's actually going to help you save more money. That is because the 30-year interest rates are at the lowest point they've ever been in history, and when you consider that your investment returns are probably going to be way higher than what you pay in interest on a mortgage. It starts making a lot of sense not to pay off your mortgage early and instead invest the difference not to mention inflation, makes your mortgage easier to pay off with future dollars. So actually the longer you keep it the cheaper and easier it becomes to pay off.

But the 30-year mortgage also gives you a huge advantage over any other option out there, and that would be flexibility. Listen, there's nothing! Stopping you from paying off a 30-year mortgage in 15 years, just make a higher payment every month and uh boom. It's the same thing, but if something comes up and you need to pay less a 30-year mortgage gives you more flexibility to make the minimum payment and then save the difference. Instead, that's why i always recommend locking yourself into a 30-year mortgage, because during a downturn, you have a choice to pay a lower amount than if you had locked yourself into a 15-year mortgage a second speaking of all of that always make sure you get a fixed Interest rate right now, with interest rates so low, it makes sense you lock in a fixed payment.

So that way, your payment stays exactly the same. The entire time. By doing this, you're going to know with 100 certainty what your mortgage payment is going to be over. The next 30 years, and by doing so you could plan accordingly.

This prevents your payments from suddenly being increased five to seven years from now. If interest rates are higher in the future as they are today, which they probably will be, and if that were to happen at the same time, the real estate market falls down. Not only is that going to be costing you more money, but the market value of that home is going to be falling alongside with it. That's why you should just go ahead and lock in your interest rate and then no matter what happens.

Your payment is going to be staying, the exact same until it's entirely paid off the third. You could also refinance your home to save more money, most likely if you own, a home already you've either looked into this or you've done it. But if you haven't - and you have the opportunity to refinance your home and save more money, then do it doing this allows you to get a brand new loan that replaces your current loan and most likely. The new loan is going to be at a substantially lower interest rate than what you're currently paying, thereby saving you more money.
In the process like for myself in the last year, i've been able to refinance to my mortgages saving me about a thousand dollars a month for maybe about a day's worth of work, and also in doing so, i was able to lock in my interest rate, for The next 30 years doing that makes your payments that much more affordable. In the event the market goes down or you lose your job or something else happens that would affect your ability to repay back that mortgage now. Fourth, this is a really important one, but avoid selling your house, if you don't need to the truth, is real estate values only matter if you intend on selling so everything i've mentioned so far, is really just designed to make your payments as low and predictable as Possible, so you won't need to sell, and ideally by not selling you'll, have the time to write out any short-term fluctuations in the price until eventually things recover, the fifth always make sure to keep an emergency fund on the sidelines. Just in case you need it.

The reality is with real estate. Anything could come up at any time that will end up costing you money like, for example, you might go an entire year without anything, going wrong and then one morning you'll wake up and it's 2 300 to fix an hvac unit. That just happened to me in a rental unit. The truth is, with real estate, you're still going to have a fixed cost every single month with owning a property like property taxes and insurance that needs to be paid.

So my recommendation is to always keep a few months worth of your property's expenses saved up in cash on the sidelines at all times, so that way should something come up, you're always going to have the money to pay for it and six, if you haven't done This already it's incredibly important to get your two free stocks down below in the description, because weevil is going to be giving you two free stocks. We need to deposit a hundred dollars on the platform, and those stocks could be worth all the way to one thousand to eight hundred and fifty dollars, which is pretty much like free money. If you haven't done that yet so the link to that is down below. In the description, but anyway for real number, six is to only buy a home that you know you could comfortably afford, don't bite off more than you could chew.

Don't over extend yourself because the house is awesome and instead get something, that's not going to cost you more than what you could reasonably afford. Generally, i recommend your housing payment not exceed 25 of your income and maybe on the high end, 33 percent. The lower your payment is in relation to how much money you make the safer it's going to be in the event of a downturn and something happens to your income. Real estate should ideally be something you only buy if you have the intention of holding on to it for at least eight to ten years and plan accordingly, in terms of how much money you need to keep making those payments, but really no matter what happens, i Think we need to take a moment and appreciate the resiliency of the real estate market throughout history in terms of being a fairly stable store of value.
Now, that's not to say that prices will not go down, because certainly there will be times where everything slows down and values drop, but instead it's a lot more important to make sure that you buy a home that you can afford that you lock in an interest Rate for as long as you can you ideally get that mortgage for 30 years and then from there you just hang on to it. For as long as you can, i highly doubt, we would see a crash as severe as 1929 or 2008, which were both events that were highly concentrated and directly hit the real estate market and really. Instead, i wouldn't be surprised if we just saw a gradual slowdown in prices over time, even though increasing home prices are beginning to worry people as long as you buy a home that you could afford with the intention of holding it eight to ten years, you should Be fine and that should be long enough to ride through any short term fluctuations in price and really, most importantly, from all of this, the best thing that you could do is make sure to smash the like button for the youtube algorithm. So with that said, you guys thank you so much for watching.

I really appreciate it as always make sure to destroy the like button. Subscribe button and notification bell also feel free to add me on instagram posted pretty much daily. So if you want to be a part of it, there feel free to add me there. As on my second channel, the graham stefan show i post there every single day - i'm not posting here.

So if you want to see a brand new video for me every single day, make sure to add yourself to that. And lastly, if you guys want those two free stocks use, the link down below in the description and weeble is going to be giving you two free stocks when you deposit a hundred dollars on the platform and those stocks, could be worth all the way up to 1. 850. So if you're interested in doing that, you may as well, because it's basically just like getting free money.

Let me know tree stocks, you get thank you so much for watching and until next time.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

31 thoughts on “How the housing crash will happen”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Cliff Ali says:

    <I respect your work mate, because you are pointing people in the right direction this is the FOMO September for the incoming dip in October. It is manipulated but that can be a good thing if you understand it. We should all know that when this report are bullish take some off to the side line, when news gets bearish start buying. '' keep it simple simple '' that bear/correction was the best thing that happened to me. But all thanks to Annika Arno for her amazing skills of helping me to earn 20 BTC through trading chart. I believe we are in the same phase

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Anthony mophy Akela says:

    This is what I call Grace, After I lost my job and thought all hope was gone, I did not even know how to get money to payoff my bills because I was already living in debt's, till I saw testimonies about Mrs Annika Arno

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars nonconformist says:

    This will be just another manufactured crisis used to gain more contol over the basic needs that it takes to sustain human life.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Keyser Söze says:

    If it does crash I pray it crashes very very hard because these fools paying 200K cash over asking price leave me scratching my head where do folks get this amount of money the vast of folks can’t see that amount in a lifetime saved at ounce

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chilling Pixel says:

    If the crash just wants to wait until I’m ready to by a house, I would very appreciate that.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dvach says:

    It's not going to crash. Liar loans and foreclosures were the reason last time.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars novadhd says:

    It will crash when home values drop and rates go up and inflation too. There will be on oversupply of people selling their homes. The main people buying now are well off.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Insidious DrNine says:

    With a low enough rate and high enough inflation a 30 year can actually result in a net negative rate interest – as in being paid to have the loan.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Karma says:

    Either way the banks are not going to lose. Only the people.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Smartballs says:

    I been licensed in Real estate since 2004. Now 90%9f pre existing homes are not up to code. The foundations are not up to code, and most are sitting on blocks not anchored to a foundation. New homes are built up to code. So the price of a home with a bad foundation should never appreciate in value. This is why homes never go up in value in areas. In Texas and Oklahoma we have $30,000 homes with foundations not up to code. Now it can cost $30,000-$50,000 to fix a foundation and bring it up to code. When you realize your foundation is screwed and you're not getting more most let it get foreclosed on, and then the lender can not sell it with a government loan (VA, HUD, FHA) so they auction it off. I bought a Adobe house in Colorado built in 1838, and burned it down, because Adobe blocks were sitting on the ground absorbing water, dirt under hardwood floors. And today Adobe need 4-6 inche cement foogers at base of walls to pass inspection for FHA loans. So it was a tear down. Cheaper to rebuild it. It was also the first fort in Colorado, first community in Colorado, and I burned it down because I couldn't profit off a remodel. The walls were bullet proof and fire proof. Only the floors and moldy roof burned. First house I bought and burned it down. See Zoning laws and housing codes make us all poor. The government wants us to have a lifestyle we can't afford like telling you how big your house has to be instead of allowing tiny homes. My county wants 600sqft or larger in Colorado and homes sell for $300 sqft in Colorado, like a real log cabin is $300sqft NEW! So a 600sqft home in CO can cost $80,000 or more. And with a minimum wage job 600sqft home is hard to obtain. There are people that own land in CO and counties won't let them occupy their land denying them the BUNDLE OF LEGAL RIGHTS they paid for like the right to possess it which means occupy it. You have to be on your land to possess it and protect it from tresspassors.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bryan Horrigan says:

    good advice Graham. Many don't understand the benefits of a 30 year and the inflationary benefits on long term debt.

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Nick Scholl says:

    Thank you for this video! I wasn't sure if I should sell or rent out my home during these times, but this video definitely helped! Leaning more towards renting out my first home with the understanding that there could be some bad years. Long term is where the true value of renting profits.

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Froelich says:

    You're making 1,000 a day? Then why would you work extra on video's. Oh, you want others to prosper…

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lenny Brewster says:

    People are paying tens of thousands over asking price. Definitely not a buyers market in many cities right now. But if hyper inflation happens current prices will seem cheap in comparison.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Veevslav1 says:

    There will not be a hard crash like we experienced in 2008. Not enough houses to go around. Unless there is a reduction in living persons substantial enough to ease the burden the market will hold pretty steady without a lot of deprecation in value when the stall happens/worsens.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jared Nelson says:

    I want the collapse of our government so we go into a civil war.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kiki S says:

    I appreciate the thoughts on a 30 year mortgage vs lowering the term…. we refinanced and kept the 30 year for exactly the reasons you said.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars forrest taylor says:

    He forgot one. Build your house. Right now with the market broken it’s almost impossible to shop for a quality house for a reasonable price. So, with that, take the long road and build your house vs the short term high dollar loss for a old house.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars cb750 says:

    Given what lumber companies can charge now for OSB those prices will not come down any time soon. A lot of suppliers shut down and the supply chain is broken.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Andrew Hartung says:

    I'm planning to start shopping for a house later this year, so I'm hoping that the timing works out where prices decline or at least stabilize and before interest rates go up too high.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Great Affinity Productions says:

    Although Ramsey the Cat cannot express their thoughts of exactly how they know, that cat is fully aware when everyone is alseep. They know what they're doing.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michael Paniagua says:

    If you're buying a home you can afford isn't the monthly difference between a 15 and 30 year loan rather small? So why not take the 15? I recently refinanced to a 15 at 2.5% from a 3.5% and the difference wasn't much. The thinking being that if you cannot afford a 15 year then you probably shouldn't be buying it at a 30 year. Video has good content, I like it.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars michael boom says:

    Am I wrong …all these homes that are being sold at the much higher level going to mean taxes will be going up also on them?

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars YB! says:

    I gave a THUMB UP just because he "said it", and literally making me laugh at the beginning of the video!

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kenneth says:

    Most I know in forbearance didn't need it. Only one needed it and they needed it long before the illness. Now they are caught up.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tuan nguyen says:

    I think most of homeowners are already locked in the lowest rate from last year. They will hold on to their houses for another 30 years, that is how we end up with severe low inventory right now. Sellers only sell when they have to.

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michael R says:

    Things are changing REIT’s and foreign investors are flooding the market can we hear about this

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars As I Understand It says:

    As someone who is watching this laying in wait for the opportunity to buy my first home for under $200,000 I'm definitely not the target demographic here, but I do appreciate the reassurance that the crash WILL finally come

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Eric says:

    Most people don't have the discipline to make extra payments.. The bank makes a crap ton of money on 30 year mortgages

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Eric says:

    The desperation for likes, makes me not want to click a like that I probably would have otherwise.

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars sendeth says:

    I really thought covid would cause a crash. What I did not take into consideration is that covid focused its effects on people who do not own homes. It was primarily renters who got hit the hardest.

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