Housing market

I wonder what the reasoning is for such a low supply of homes on the market. Why are so few people selling?

From the NPR article I linked:

That's a blinking red light for Bill Wheaton, a housing economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"Don't buy into a frenzy," Wheaton cautions. He says if you can find a house you can afford that you like, and you're planning to stay there for five years, buying makes sense.

But that is getting much harder to find. He says if you factor out inflation, the past one-year gain in home prices nationally is about 10%.

"It's never been that high," Wheaton says, "ever in the last 50 years, so there's really something going on."

Since the last housing crash, Wheaton says the country hasn't been building enough homes. And now there's a record low supply of homes for sale. Some builders went bankrupt, and workers found other types of jobs after the crash. Zoning rules can block construction of more affordable units. And the price of lumber has been soaring.

Meanwhile, interest rates are low, and with the pandemic people want more space. So there's plenty of demand.

Wheaton says, after a few years, builders in many areas will eventually catch up and there will be more homes from which to choose.

"At some point supply will kick in," Wheaton says.
 
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From the NPR article I linked:

That's a blinking red light for Bill Wheaton, a housing economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"Don't buy into a frenzy," Wheaton cautions. He says if you can find a house you can afford that you like, and you're planning to stay there for five years, buying makes sense.

But that is getting much harder to find. He says if you factor out inflation, the past one-year gain in home prices nationally is about 10%.

"It's never been that high," Wheaton says, "ever in the last 50 years, so there's really something going on."

Since the last housing crash, Wheaton says the country hasn't been building enough homes. And now there's a record low supply of homes for sale. Some builders went bankrupt, and workers found other types of jobs after the crash. Zoning rules can block construction of more affordable units. And the price of lumber has been soaring.

Meanwhile, interest rates are low, and with the pandemic people want more space. So there's plenty of demand.


Wheaton says, after a few years, builders in many areas will eventually catch up and there will be more homes from which to choose.

"At some point supply will kick in," Wheaton says.
Good post, but it’s not just a matter of new construction. Supply of existing homes is also very low. People just don’t seem to want to sell compared to other years.
 
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house went on the MLS yesterday afternoon, have 2 showings for it next week either Monday/Tuesday or both on Tuesday so far.
 
id go land and off the grid cabin, central bankers will allow the world to go to rubble before they give up control to decentralized finance
 
Have they come out with the Telluride Karen Edition yet? Because that’s who drives that vehicle. If you’re a dude driving a Telluride as your daily driver, stop it.
At a certain part of point of your life, most people start buying vehicles that make sense for them and worry less about "chicks are going to want me and guys are going to be jealous when they see me with my leg hanging out the side of my doorless Jeep".
 
That’s what happens when people that have no knowledge of real estate attempt to join the conversation. You end up talking about Karen and really dumbing down the thread.
I didn’t help when I saw dmclone mention they have a Telluride and asked questions. I totally didn’t expect it to be a focus of the thread going forward.

I enjoy the original topic of the thread. We are relocating out of state and see how crazy the market is selling and buying. Fortunately we sold our Eastern Iowa house easily (pending closing in a couple weeks) but knew we are entering the same hornets nest for buying. We ended up signing a lease (hopefully for just the year) and seeing how the rental market is intense right now, we feel fortunate to even find a good rental. We are hoping that in 9 months things settle down a little bit and we can buy. We understand prices may still be high but hope there is more inventory and you aren’t against 10 other offers for the same home.
 
That’s what happens when people that have no knowledge of real estate attempt to join the conversation. You end up talking about Karen and really dumbing down the thread.

How about we pivot and say "Do NOT buy a Telluride or any other vehicle while you're in the middle of a real estate transaction".

I've seen too many transactions blowed up because peeps want to buy a new car for the new garage. Hold up until the real estate deal is done otherwise you could be outta luck.

At least now it's somewhat full circle.
 
How about we pivot and say "Do NOT buy a Telluride or any other vehicle while you're in the middle of a real estate transaction".

I've seen too many transactions blowed up because peeps want to buy a new car for the new garage. Hold up until the real estate deal is done otherwise you could be outta luck.

At least now it's somewhat full circle.
Does that really happen? I know people stretch when buying a house but does a $30k+ purchase sink a mortgage app?
 

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