meccos12 said:
irvinehomeowner said:
One other con to waiting is interest rates.
I think a key factor being overlooked in the waiting game situation is how the buyer plans to purchase. If they are buying all cash, then a lower price is obv much more inviting. However, if you are like me, and are financing, a 5-10% drop is not as big a difference when you are looking at the delta in the down payment and the monthly payment. Additionally, if rates go higher, whatever savings you are waiting for, may be erased by a higher rate.
If rates go up, it will worsen affordability, which is being stretched thin already. A 1% increase in rates leads to about a 10% decrease in affordability. Thus the savings of a 5-10% price drop will be essentially wiped by a 50 to 100 basis point increase, or the cost of a 50-100 basis point increase is negated by a 5-10% home price drop. I honestly do not feel we are going to see a 1% increase in mortgage rates however. And if we did, we will certainly see a significant drop in prices.
Lets assume however that we see a 50 basis point increase in rates and a 5% drop in home prices. Although I just wrote that these things essentially negative the effect of each other, I would argue that I would still take higher rates and lower home prices for a few reasons.
1. lower down payment and the opportunity advantage/costs of this 2. more mortgage interest deduction. 3. bigger effects with earlier payments. 4. less property taxes. 5. better possibility of refi to lower rates in the future.
In essence I do not see any downsides to having higher rates with lower prices versus lower rates and higher prices.
I don't think in the recent history of rates... has there been a decrease in prices equal to an increase in rates.
Now as you say, due to higher rates, there will be downward pressure on pricing but that doesn't really happen for certain products in Irvine because a large number of buyers don't finance so that pressure of affordability is small. You can look at the last dip as an example, while everyone else were getting drops of 40% on certain houses, those same homes would only drop 20% or less in Irvine. So a overall 5-10% drop in Orange County will be what in Irvine? 2-5%?
This is why I specifically said that this is depending on how you plan to purchase. If you are financing, you are at a disadvantage because your are competing against buyers who pay cash where the interest rate does not really affect them. So you are paying Irvine cash (not as low) prices while financing at a higher rate.
And in your scenario, the downside is you need to wait (again, not sure what house you will get) and you have no guarantees that the higher rate/lower price affordability will be better than the lower rate/higher price.