I will have real estate paying my billsGreen new deal isnât socialism at all lol hahaI like capitalism, I donât want a hand out. And I donât like regulations .. like trump said we will never be a socialist countryYea, so you shouldn't be voting Republican. But by all means keep doing it and let us know when you make a success of your life. I won't hold my breath.
And we weren't under Obama and Clinton, even though Republicans all warned that those two would make us a socialist nation.
You are just a brainwashed Republicans swallowing the GOP's talking points.
What you most likely never will be is successful. If you are like most Americans you'll be underpaid and you'll never save enough to retire. You will struggle. But don't worry your boss, me and Trump will do great.
What is your 5 year plan? How much money are you saving every month? Typical white male blue collar deplorables will defend the GOP even when you are 71 and can't afford to retire.
Millennials Are About to Get Locked Out of the Real Estate MarketâAgain
Over the past couple of years, rising pay and low mortgage rates finally converged to make make the dream of home ownership a reality for Americaâs millennials, many of whom had long been locked out of the housing market. But now, the door is on the verge of slamming on the under-35 crowd, leaving young families outside looking through the picture windowâagain.
During the housing-bubble frenzy from 2004 to 2006, as Boud recently recounted to Fortune, easy credit sent sales soaring, inflating prices and leading to a gigantic oversupply of new homes. In 2008 and 2009, the banks and other lenders, overwhelmed with defaults and foreclosures, throttled back so hard on credit that demand collapsed, and housing prices went into a tailspin.
The upshot: From 2009 to 2017, the housing market severely overcorrected, with prices steadily rising once again. âHousing went through a long period of undervalution,â says Boud. It wasnât millennials, he points out, who benefited from the cheap prices and rescued the market. âThe millennials had loads of college debt, and many had bad credit, often because their previous loans had been foreclosed on.â He also notes that many millennials were unable to secure stable, well-paying jobs in the wake of the Great Recession. And they were too The upshot: The youthful cohort had more difficulty getting mortgages than in the period before the financial crisis, limiting their ability to become homeowners.
Instead, it was the affluent and investors that profited from low prices and soaked up the excess inventory. âThe rich were the buyers without the credit problems,â says Boud. âAnd institutional investors bought houses cheap and rented them out.â In fact, he says, many of these new ownersâ tenants were the very millennials shunned by the banks. In terms of home ownership, millennials became the lost generation.
Starting around 2017, the millennials got back in the game, in a big way. The job rolls expanded, and wages jumped. The mortgage market reopened for the more well-to-do 30-somethings. So even though credit overall remained tight, sales to millennials rose, from 22% of new homes sales around 2011 to 50% in 2018âa healthy figure, given that millennials account for just one-third of the U.S. population.
Now says Boud, the market is once again turning against the biggest, and still hungriest, class of buyers. âPrices have risen a lot, and theyâre still rising because weâre still under-building compared to household formation,â he says. âAt the same time, rates on home loans are rising, making it much harder for millennials to qualify.â The affordability problem will intensify because of the types of homes the builders are erecting. High land prices are forcing many builders to build large houses because land prices have increased so rapidly. âSo the average home size has welling to over 2300 square feet, which is too big and expensive for first time buyers,â says Boud. The best way to make money on expensive land is to build big houses, so âthe average home size is 3,000 square feet, which is way too big most first-time buyers,â he adds. âTen years ago in Las Vegas, a house of that size cost maybe $150,000 [thanks to the housing plunge]. Now it costs $325,000, well out of the reach of young buyers.â
The millennial generation that housing lost, then briefly found, is about to be lost once more, unless we provide for them the type, size and price of homes they can afford.