I actually blame greed and apathy more than the economy in general.
Greed on the part of certain unscrupulous mortgage brokers who approved homebuyers for loans they could never afford (especially adjustable-rate mortgages that were perhaps 'affordable' in the early years of the loan). Greed on the part of certain real estate brokers and agents who like to get their noses in many aspects of the transaction which are none of their business, yet turn a blind eye to people buying houses they'll never afford long-term. Greed on the part of certain companies in my own industry (title and closing), because most of them are owned by real estate brokers by way of 'joint ventures' and are probably illegal under RESPA. Greed on the part of certain buyers who are in business of flipping (buying a house and immediately selling it for a profit), many of whom are crying now because they got caught holding a property that they can't sell for a profit or even what they paid.
Apathy on the part of the American home buyers, who steadfastly refuse to educate themselves on the many aspects of home buying, even though it's the largest purchase they're likely to make. You can bet they'll research televisions, cell phones, mp3 players.. but not appraisal fees, broker fees, title companies, prevailing interest rates.
Pardon the rant, but I've been in this business for 18 years now and the last 5 years have probably been the ugliest in terms of any signs of ethics in the various parts of the industry. Certainly there are good and respectable folks performing all of the functions that I mentioned above, and hopefully they'll be the ones left standing when the market corrects itself and many snake-oil salesmen are ejected from the industry.
Meanwhile, would-be homeowners need to do their homework to avoid becoming a foreclosure statistic, or being saddled long-term with a mortgage that is too much of a financial burden.
Wow.. did I really just type all of that?![]()
Wow.. did I really just type all of that?
Good rant, Steve. You're right, people really do need to do their homework when buying real estate.
"Adjustable rate mortgage" gives me the whim-whams..... ew....
Doesn't sound that healthy to me, actually? The term 'house of cards' comes to mind.
How about negative amortisation mortgages?
How will the latest news from Bear Sterns impact the market?
ARMs, per se, aren't a bad thing. What is bad, however, is someone taking one out at a low rate without factoring in how much payments rise when the rate increases.
Getting word from a few message groups I subscribe to that US property is in freefall. Is this true or just hype? What is the word on the street? How is this story(non-story?) being spun by the US media?
Apathy on the part of the American home buyers, who steadfastly refuse to educate themselves on the many aspects of home buying, even though it's the largest purchase they're likely to make. You can bet they'll research televisions, cell phones, mp3 players.. but not appraisal fees, broker fees, title companies, prevailing interest rates.
The real estate industry probably thinks they've "dumbed down" the contracts,
info sheets and legalese enough that the average person can understand it, but it's
not true.
^ ahahaha, nothing when you convert it into UK pounds
Good god the exchange rate was 2USD:1GBP the other day, actually it was $2.04->1GBP! I don't know what you wankers are doing, but you'd better buy up US stuff right now!This won't last long... hopefully...
^ ahahaha, nothing when you convert it into UK pounds
Good god the exchange rate was 2USD:1GBP the other day, actually it was $2.04->1GBP! I don't know what you wankers are doing, but you'd better buy up US stuff right now!This won't last long... hopefully...
After reading and seeing all the house prices in this thread I am wondering what the average salary in the US is. :O
I agree with your point 100%. When I bought my first house in 1994, the sales agreement was 3 pages long. I bought a different house in 2006, and the sales agreement was 21 pages long... mostly filled with new contingencies and disclosures which were somehow common sense during the first 230 years of this country's existence. *Sigh.*![]()