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It’s no surprise that, throughout the last 30 years or so…Real estate prices have continued to climb as interest rates have continued to decline…and now, we’re at the cheapest rates we’ve EVER seen, while housing is ALSO the most expensive it’s even been. The concern, however, is how sustainable IS this - what’s going to happen when interest rates rise back up - and is there the worry of more inventory flooding the markets once mortgages in forbearance are able to be foreclosed?
It’s difficult to say FOR SURE since there are SO many different factors at play like the local economy for each market, how much inventory there is, and its desirability…but, we’ll talk about AVERAGES here, overall…and this is what was found:
Despite what you would think, one study concluded that - historically - rising interest rates actually made NO DIFFERENCE, OVERALL, to the price of housing - in fact, since the 1980’s, housing continued to rise even though mortgages rates went UP.
https://i.imgur.com/IWE4chD.jpg
Another resource confirmed, this as well….analysis from Core Logic, Freddie Mac, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that housing prices did INDEED go up, even though interest rates ALSO went up.
https://edit.urban.org/sites/default/files/hfpcfig2_revised.png
https://www.urban.org/urban-wire/when-interest-rates-go-healthy-economy-history-says-home-prices-will-rise
The reason for this is rather simple, though: One, interest rates are generally only increased in a good economy, where people are spending money, with consistent wage growth….which, typically means people are buying homes.
And, TWO - interest rates are also increased to combat inflation, which as any real estate investor will know…inflation is generally GOOD for real estate, because that also causes home price to rise up, in tandem.
The thing is, real estate is based on so many small factors, like location, inventory, the local job market, the health of the economy...and obviously, some markets will end up doing much BETTER than others.
But then there’s also the concern of FORECLOSURES…as it is right now, home owners have the option of opting in to mortgage forbearance, which allows them to temporarily “pause” their housing payments and then extend those missed payments to the end of the loan. During this time, forecloses are temporarily put on hold - and, beginning next year, we should begin to see the outcome of how many people can resume their payments.
The GOOD news is that, month after month, it actually looks like the amount of mortgages in forbearance has been steadily going down - and the latest finding was that, last month, loans in forbearance decreased from 7.2% to now 6.8%.
http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/09232020_black_knight_first_look.asp
So, in this case - EVEN THOUGH there are mortgages in forbearance…it’s unlikely that ALL of those are going to completely stop paying once the forbearance period is up, it’s unlikely that EVERYONE is going to be selling at the same time, and it’s unlikely that they’re going to crash the market.
All YOU need to be made aware of is that you ONLY buy a home that you can afford to live in LONG TERM, without the intention of selling. Generally, I don’t recommend buying real estate without the intention of holding it at LEAST 10-20 years because ANYTHING can happen in the short term - but, as long as you buy something that you MAKE SURE you can afford, with a healthy emergency fund to cover you during a time of potential unemployment - then you should be okay.
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 you guys, it's graham here, so i'm sure it's no surprise that lately it's been impossible to check the news without seeing some of the most astonishing real estate related headlines like home sales jumped to a 14-year high prices soared 14. Last month, home prices hit record highs the biggest gain in two years. Mortgage demand up 25 and yeah, i'm not even kidding, that's all in the last week. Obviously, in the last few months the real estate market has experienced something that could only be described as the eighth wonder of the world.

Will prices continue to skyrocket while unemployment remains at a record high, and i know we could point to record low interest rates mortgage forbearance and a decrease in inventory in terms of pushing up demand, but still the question that gets brought up non-stop time and time again Is whether or not this is sustainable and how much longer can this continue before? Eventually, housing prices begin to stabilize or come down, not to mention? At the same time, we have some other people warning about the housing market potentially dropping and that maybe we're about to come to an end of housing prices, doing nothing but going up. Well, we've got some answers so we're going to be going over whether or not it's a good idea to buy a home with interest rates at their lowest rates. Well, pretty much ever or is this just propping up prices long enough for them to eventually fall back down once foreclosures are processed and interest rates go back up, and i say all of this is somebody's been working in real estate full-time for 12 years now i Own seven, going on eight properties and real estate is my largest investment still to this day. But my second largest investment, however, is smashing the like button and really good news on that.

But the like button is now more affordable than ever and it costs you nothing to make. It turn blue for the youtube algorithm. So thank you so much for doing that, and also a quick thank you to morningbrew for sponsoring this video, but more on that later. Alright, so i'm not going to bore you with all the details of what's happened over these last few months, so i will summarize everything in under a minute in march, for the most part, the entire economy shut down and the fed lowered their benchmark interest rates.

All the way down to almost zero percent in a way to bolster up the economy, low interest rates just means that money is now cheaper. To borrow, it helps promote a little bit more inflation and that should keep people away from hoarding too much cash. During a time where everything is going down in value and people are out of work, but real estate took a slightly different turn. Low interest rates caused a surge of home buying demand, because now the cost of a mortgage was a little bit cheaper, which meant people could get more home for their dollar, and so everyone had the exact same idea.

Let's go and buy a house, but there was a problem: sellers were not listing their homes, not only were sellers concerned about having strangers walk through their homes during a time where cases were spiking, but also even if they did sell. Where would they move to or who would give them a loan? In the event, they lost their job that caused inventory to dwindle down to record low levels as people held off from listing their homes, and that's where all of this begins. I'm sure this one does not need any explaining, but the price that someone's willing to pay for something is largely dictated by supply and demand like if there's a lot of something available, but very few people are willing to pay for it. Like disney's new release.
Mulan then, prices come down, but if there's very little of something and a lot of people wanting to buy it, then prices go up like with toilet paper. Well toilet paper just basically happened to houses. Fewer listings, available, combined with more people wanting to lock in a low interest rate on their mortgage, meant that people now began outbidding each other in an effort to buy what little inventory was currently on the market. And now here we are with housing prices reaching.

Yet again, their all-time record high. Some people worry. This is another 2008 like housing crisis upon us and others just feel discouraged that they're outpriced of the real estate market. Yet again, so, what's going on? First, let's talk about interest rates, because this is going to have the biggest impact on you and what you pay for a home like here's, a quick test for you.

I want you to play along with this and tell me, which one is the cheaper home to buy. The first option is a home for three hundred thousand dollars that you could buy with a 30-year mortgage at six percent interest. Now. The second option is the exact same home next door that you could buy for 000, with a 30-year mortgage at 2 interest.

Think about it for a second there's, a 150 000 price difference between the two and the only variable here is the interest rate. Well, if you guess the 450 000 home would be cheaper well, you would be right. The cost of buying that four hundred and fifty thousand dollar home at a two percent interest rate works out to be two thousand thirty, eight dollars and twenty nine cents per month. With the one percent property tax rate and, of course, the cost of buying the three hundred thousand dollar home at a six percent interest rate works out to be two thousand forty eight dollars and sixty five cents per month.

With that same one percent property tax rate. So, in this example buying the more expensive home is actually ten dollars a month cheaper, even though it costs you an extra 150 000 in the purchase price. If you're confused here's how that works. When you calculate your mortgage payment, it's made up of both principal and interest and the interest rate you pay can make a pretty substantial difference in how much your monthly payment is.
For example, if you borrow a hundred thousand dollars at a three percent interest rate, your monthly payment would be four hundred and twenty two dollars. But if that exact same loan, now has a five percent interest rate you're now going to be paying 537 dollars a month. That means that as interest rates go down, your mortgage becomes cheaper, which also means you can afford to buy a more expensive home like in our last example. It's no surprise that over the last 30 years, or so real estate prices have continued to climb, as interest rates have continued to decline and now we're at the cheapest rates we've ever seen.

While real estate prices have been the most expensive they've ever been the concern. However, is how sustainable is this and what's going to happen when interest rates end up going back up and is there a worry of more inventory flooding the market, as mortgage forbearances, eventually turn into foreclosures, but before i answer that, i want to say a huge. Thank you to our sponsor today, morningbrew now, you might think this is a coffee company, judging by the name and my obsession with 20 cent iced coffee, but you would be wrong. They're, a totally free daily newsletter that gets sent to you every monday through saturday and brings you up to speed with the most important business news in just five minutes now.

This is just me talking here, but when i agreed to do this sponsorship, i told them that they would have to be cool with me saying whatever i wanted to say about them without having to read off a bullet point checklist and they said sure, because they Know they got a good product and honestly i like it a lot now, as some of you know, in order for me to come up with enough content to make three videos like this every single week. I have to read a lot of news, so i can absorb as much information as possible. Then craft videos around topics that you would want to watch three months ago. I subscribed to morning brew, and i kid you not.

It's now become the first thing that i do in the morning when i wake up at 6 a.m. It's actually this weird habit now, where i don't get out of bed until i've completely finished reading their newsletter. It's like they scour the internet. Looking for the best business news like good rx, going public and their profitability or how california wants to ban gasoline-powered cars by 2035 or how echelon fitness is competing with peloton, it's just really interesting content.

It gets sent to your email every single morning. I read them all myself and i like them enough to recommend them to you. So if you're interested in business, finance or tech subscribe to them down below using the link in the description, it's totally free and takes just 15 seconds, you'll be very glad you did. I really liked it myself and with that said, let's get back into the video okay.
So back to the video, let me explain: what's going on and i'll keep it really easy and just start with interest rates. In march, the fed decided to lower their benchmark interest rates all the way down to the low number of almost zero percent. Of course, you might be wondering whoa zero percent interest. Does that mean i could soon get a zero percent mortgage, and the answer to that is no, it's highly unlikely that we would ever be able to borrow money to buy a house at zero percent, or that we would ever get to a point where negative interest Rates means that we pay back less money than we borrow chances are.

This is never going to happen now. What ends up happening is that when a bank lends money, what they're really doing is receiving a commission for pre-packaging a loan that they could sell to an investor who wants a relatively risk-free return and the biggest buyers of these loans are the government-sponsored agencies, freddie, mac And fannie mae, who will guarantee those loans to investors when the bank brings them a loan that fits their criteria? So banks end up using this as their guideline to give loans from so they can immediately turn around and sell them off, thereby making a quick profit. But as with any loan, there's always a small amount of risk involved, not all homeowners will make their mortgage, some of them will pay late and others will just flat out default as soon as they get the house. So obviously, banks and investors need to be compensated for this risk, and if they don't make that money from their interest rate, then they certainly will make that money by increasing their upfront fees anyway, with that out of the way, the fed has recently stated that they Intend to keep interest rates low as long as they need to in order to stimulate the economy and will continue to keep interest rates low to meet their target 2 inflation for real estate.

That just means that housing will continue to be cheap to finance and because the financing is cheaper, that extra money just gets siphoned into what the buyer is willing to now pay for a property. But that of course lends the question: what happens when interest rates go up, it's difficult to say for sure, since there's so many different factors at play like the local economy, for each market, its desirability and how much inventory there is. But we'll talk about averages here and here's what i found, despite what you might think, one study concluded that historically rising interest rates actually made no difference overall to the price of housing. In fact, since the 1980s housing continued to rise, even when mortgage rates were going up, another study confirmed this as well analysis from corelogic freddie mac and the bureau of labor statistics found that housing prices did indeed go up, even though interest rates also went up.

The reasoning behind this is actually pretty simple. One interest rates are generally only increased during a good economy, with strong wage growth where people are spending money and two interest rates are also raised to combat inflation, which, as any real estate investor, will tell you. Inflation is generally good for real estate, because that causes prices to rise up in tandem. So an easy way to put it is this low interest rates just means that real estate is now cheaper to finance and interest rates only go up during a good economy where people are spending money and increased inflation, which, like i just said, is also good for Real estate, however, let's be real, it's not like everything happening, just benefits real estate, like an asteroid, hits earth and all of a sudden real estate prices increase two thousand percent, as supply dwindles to record lows.
The thing is: real estate is based on so many small factors like location inventory, the local job market and the health of the overall economy, and obviously some locations are going to end doing a lot better than others. For example, in the last 12 months, san francisco only saw a six percent increase in prices compared to san diego, which saw a 5.2 percent increase in prices. That goes to show you that local market factors and the local job market influences prices much greater than simply low interest rates, and that does mean that eventually, if more inventory comes on the market, then real estate prices should begin to stabilize or dare i say it Actually go down and with inventory at record lows with record low interest rates that has kept prices buoyant. Eventually, i have a feeling that, over time, more sellers are going to be comfortable listing their homes in this market inventory will increase and over the next few months or years, things should begin to normalize, but then there's also the concern of foreclosures, as it is right Now homeowners have the option of opting into mortgage forbearance that allows them to temporarily pause their payments and then add them back on to the end of the loan.

The good news here is that it looks like month after month, the amount of loans and forbearance has been steadily decreasing, and the latest finding was that last month, loans and forbearance went down from 7.2 percent to now 6.8. Now, in terms of how severe this is and what this means for the entire housing market, the actual numbers are not as alarming as it is today. Homeowners have, on average, across all the homes out there about sixty percent worth of equity in their property, meaning for every one hundred dollars of value that they have. They only owe forty dollars and forty two percent of all homes are owned, free and clear.

That means we would be highly unlikely to see a wave of foreclosures unless housing prices dropped about 30 percent, leaving a portion of those mortgages under water and then subject to foreclosure. So here's how that works when a home is foreclosed that just means that the home owners stop making payments to the bank. So the bank has to foreclose on that home to recoup the loan. But if you owe a bank a hundred thousand dollars on your home worth 150 000 there's no way you're letting the bank take over the home because it's worth more than what you owe on it.
So, instead, what you do is you sell the home? You use that money to pay back the bank and then you walk away with the 50 000 in equity. So, in this case, even though there are mortgages and forbearance, it's unlikely that all of those people are going to stop paying their loan once the forbearance period is up. It's also unlikely that everyone is going to start selling at the same time and that everyone together is going to start crashing the market. Now in terms of the numbers.

Here, 3.6 million people were more than 30 days late on their loan, which represents about four percent of the entire housing market. Now, as of last year, ten percent of homes with a mortgage owed more than what the home was actually worth, meaning about point four percent of homes and forbearance right now are at risk of foreclosure where the home owner owes more on the home than what the Home is actually worth the remaining homes out. There have enough equity in them where, if the homeowner needs to, they could sell it, pay back the bank and then walk away without having a foreclosure on their record. The biggest risk here, though, is that if everyone decides to list and sell their home at the exact same time, just flooding the market with inventory, but i think realistically, that's probably not going to happen.

The biggest concern that i see right now is with retail space, where currently almost 20 percent of loans are in default, as businesses close down. Overall, though, here's my advice, low interest rates are keeping prices. High record low inventory can't stay low forever and eventually i think interest rates will go up, but who knows how? Much or when that will happen? Yes, we have mortgages and forbearance and incredibly high unemployment, but overall it's a lot more important to look at the local market conditions than national trends. For example, i could see real estate prices in new york and san francisco going down, but prices in texas and phoenix going up as more people want to move there.

Real estate is really going to be a local market, depending on where you live, and even though national trends can have a small influence on price, it is not the end-all be-all. Instead, all you need to really know is that you only buy a home that you could afford that you intend to live in long term without selling. Generally, i don't recommend buying real estate unless you have the intention of holding it at least 10 or 20 years, because anything can happen in the short term. But as long as you buy something that you could comfortably afford, alongside with a healthy emergency fund in case something happens, then you should be okay, i'm still buying real estate and i currently have another home under contract.
But you need to look very closely for the right deals and make sure you can afford it or that it cash flows enough for you to break even in the worst case scenario, if you could do that, even if there's a downturn you'll be totally okay to Weather through the storm until things recover, that's exactly what i'm doing, along with smashing the like button for the youtube algorithm. So what that said, you guys thank you so much for watching make sure to destroy the subscribe button, and the notification bell also feel free to add me on instagram, i post it pretty much daily. So if you want to be a part of it, there feel free to add me there. As my second channel.

The gram 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 want two totally free stocks worth at minimum, eight dollars, weeble is going to be giving you two free stocks. We need to deposit a hundred dollars on the platform with one of the stocks potentially worth all the way up to 1 600.

So if you want to get those two free stocks use that link down below, thank you so much for watching and until next time.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

27 thoughts on “Real estate is about to drop – again”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Will Delaney JR says:

    Little advice . Save the “ smash the like button “ for the end because youre literally asking people to like a video they havent even watched yet ..

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mavin Bruce says:

    I made my profits during the Christmas holiday by investing with a professional broker Ms Charlotte Briggs. I'm now living the good life

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dalton Michaels says:

    think of the current interest rates as a negative rate. The current estimated rate of inflation is higher than the interest rates. this means the housing market could be stagnated for 30 years and you would still be "making money" by protecting yourself from inflation in an extremely secure asset you can live in or profit off of from renting.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brad Haaf says:

    Largest amount of baby boomers retire and sell their homes within the next 5 years, Investing in property is suicide for your money.
    Not to mention they just 3D printed at home for $10,000 in 24hr. Technology always gets better faster and cheaper

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rob Travieso JR says:

    We can’t sit around and be worried about a fall of the markets every year! We just need to move forward

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DeeDee Andarde says:

    I really appreciate all your videos. Thank you for all of your knowledge and research to make us viewers more informed.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Karen Reddy says:

    That title really didn't have to be that "click baitey"

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jimmie Romero says:

    This never happened in my area. Prices are almost 10% or higher this month and its ridiculous, homes are going 10k over asking because its a sellers market and its terrible. Ive lost 4 houses already because of 7+ bids on a home. I even went after a HUD home that needed way to much work with no luck.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kathy Kali says:

    I love Morning Brew! Simple, funny, and to the point on great news. Thanks for turning me on to them!

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Annon A says:

    Hope you are having a good day was hoping you were going to have an updated video about mortgage rates changing due to the election. I am buying a home and have seen within 1 day a 0.6% increase in rates in the state of Washington for FHA 30yr fixed loan rate. It was at 3.0%, making it today 3.625%. Trying to gauge what other changes may come before locking in on the loan.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rachael Lyn says:

    Looking to buy my first house and someone has FINALLY been able to explain what the heck is going on in the housing market when I thought it would be quite different when I began my search…hardly any houses and they are gone within hours of being posted for sale! I was worried about paying more for a house because of it, but I will revel in the low interest rate I've been approved for!

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gele Naglar says:

    0 or nagative interest rate is for the banking interbank ledning rate, but ofc if the bank can barrow cheap then ofc their loans to the individuals will be cheap also. and when the rate goes up the homeloand but get up because bank cant have a negative spread income.

    so when the interest rate are low, dont think the money is free.
    the banks get bailous but the houshold will always get fucked.

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Bo says:

    Problem is, that $450,000 house will be $300,000 in 2-3 years while that $300,000 will remain the same, give or take $15,000-$20,000

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jon Strande says:

    Good then maybe greedy real estate dildos will drop prices so everyone can have a home during this shutdown.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kevin Shirl says:

    There are over two million 90,000 foreclosures in the United States happening right now!

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Penny Wiser says:

    Most $600k homes aren’t worth $30k in building material

    Owing upwards of a million on a home for 30 years is nuts

    Rent. Much better

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Anthony Capitan says:

    Very rosy spin. Forbearance programs started at the same time and will mostly end around the same time for those who simply can't pay. In an average year, something like 4% – 4.5% of homes are sold nationwide, so if just 2 -3% of total homes, out of the roughly 7% currently in forbearance, decide to sell at around the same time, that would increase normal inventory by roughly 50% with MOTIVATED SELLERS – who don't just want to sell, but have to. That could definitely collapse the market, and is why keeping track of what's going on with unemployment and business closures is critical.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars KSJNX says:

    People can barely afford these home prices at 2% interest rates. What's going to happen when they go back to 3-4% in a couple of years? Unless you are buying a home to live in for 10 years +, I would wait to see what happens with the housing market next year.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chris Jury says:

    Same experience in NZ, a combination of low interest rates, low deposit rates, inflated stock prices, low number of listings , lack of land and expensive build costs – and high demand caused by immigration (kiwi's returning home) all make for a very powerful push upwards on prices. All the indicators are full on for price rises – never in our history has it been so.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars SG says:

    Wow that argument for the 450k at 2% home being cheaper than the 300k at 6% hurts my soul since it lies to your viewers.

    1st off nobody is going to put 0% down on a house so please change that math to even 3.5% FHA or the more ideal 20% conventional.

    20% down on 300k is 60k
    20% down on 450k is 90k

    That's 30k saved right then and there.

    Also your assuming the person will pay off that home in 30yrs. Allow me to help you here, if your 30 yrs old and plan is to make your last mortgage payment at the age of 60 you live in a fantasy world. Nearly nobody stays in a home with a mortgage for 30yrs, for that 300k at 6% extra payments go a lot further than the 450k at 2% house.

    I'll take the 300k at 6% any day knowing for 10 bucks more a month I keep 30k in downpayment savings g and higher ability to pay off the home faster.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Finance & Coffee says:

    If you ever get frustrated with people in "real estate" and their big words I recently made a video called "real estate lingo people use to sound smart".

    Thank you!

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Wesley Leigh says:

    it does cost me actually bc then your sub par video will turn up in my pristine Liked videos tab

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lightsydephil says:

    Hey Graham, wouldn't Opendoor (ticker: IPOB) put real estate agents out of business since they are going through the ibuying (sell + buy) approach through their app? I see this is rapidly growing especially among Millennial home buyers.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dylan Edwards says:

    I usually don't really click the like button but graham is so nice I feel guilty if I don't.

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ed West says:

    Even if the market gets flooded so many Millennials and Gen Zers will then have a chance to buy a house when before maybe they couldnt so it won't completely tank the housing market.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Waren says:

    Missing something? Are process falling soon? Or is title bait and switch ?

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Matthew Jubb says:

    i always thought that mortgages rates were more tightly linked to 30yr treasury yields than the fedfunds rate. Also might be an interesting topic to cover to retirement of LIBOR which many ARM mortgages use as their floating rates, which will be replaced with SOFR – which is usually a lot lower because it represents averaged secured overnight lending rather than term (3 months etc) interbank lending – which includes credit risk, havn't seen any mortgages providers say what will happen to their ARMs went LIBOR goes away.

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